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1 Life and work  





2 Awards and honors  





3 Literature  





4 References  





5 External links  














Joseph J. Kohn






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Joseph Kohn)

Joseph J. Kohn
Born(1932-05-18)May 18, 1932
DiedSeptember 13, 2023(2023-09-13) (aged 91)
Alma materMIT
Princeton University
Scientific career
InstitutionsPrinceton University
Doctoral advisorDonald Spencer
Doctoral studentsDavid Catlin
Gerald Folland
Pengfei Guan
Mei-Chi Shaw

Joseph John Kohn (May 18, 1932 – September 13, 2023) was a Czechoslovakian-born American academic and mathematician. He was professor of mathematics at Princeton University, where he researched partial differential operators and complex analysis.

Life and work

[edit]

Kohn's father was Czech-Jewish architect Otto Kohn. After Nazi Germany invaded Czechoslovakia, he and his family emigrated to Paris and Ecuador in 1939. There, Otto attended Colegio Americano de Quito.[1]

In 1945, Joseph moved to the United States, where he attended Brooklyn Technical High School. He studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S. 1953) and at Princeton University, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1956 under Donald Spencer ("A Non-Self-Adjoint Boundary Value Problem on Pseudo-Kähler Manifolds").[2]

From 1956 to 1957, Kohn was an instructor at Princeton. In 1958, he served as assistant professor, in 1962, associate professor and in 1964, professor at Brandeis University, where he also served as Chairman of the Mathematics Department (1963–66). Since 1968, he had been a professor at Princeton University, where he served as chairman from 1993 to 1996. He was a visiting professor at Harvard (1996–97), Prague, Florence, Mexico City (National Polytechnic Institute), Stanford, Berkeley, Scuola Normale Superiore (Pisa, Italy), and IHES (France).

Kohn's work focused, among other things, on the use of partial differential operators in the theory of functions of several complex variables and microlocal analysis. He has at least 65 doctoral descendants.

Kohn was a Sloan Fellow in 1963 and a Guggenheim Fellow in 1976–77. From 1976 to 1988, he was a member of the editorial board of the Annals of Mathematics. In 1966, he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of MathematiciansinMoscow; he gave a speech on "Differential complexes".

Film director Miloš Forman was his half-brother through their father Otto Kohn.

Kohn died in Plainsboro, New Jersey on September 13, 2023, at the age of 91.[3][4][5]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Kohn was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences from 1966 and a member of the National Academy of Sciences from 1988. In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society (AMS).[6]

Kohn won the AMS' Steele Prize in 1979 for his paper "Harmonic integrals on strongly convex domains". In 1990, he received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Bologna.[7] In 2004, he was awarded the Bolzano Prize.

Literature

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Cook, portraits by Mariana (2009). Mathematicians an outer view of the inner world (Online-Ausg. ed.). Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press (PUP). p. 110. ISBN 978-1400832880.
  • ^ People: Joseph John John, princeton.edu. Accessed August 6, 2023.
  • ^ Chang, Kenneth (October 24, 2023). "Joseph J. Kohn, Who Broke New Ground in Calculus, Dies at 91". The New York Times. Retrieved October 25, 2023.
  • ^ "Joseph Kohn". legacy.com. September 14, 2023. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  • ^ "Joseph J. Kohn". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  • ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2013-01-27.
  • ^ Joseph J. KohnatPrinceton University (curriculum vitae)
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_J._Kohn&oldid=1230399701"

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