Louis Nirenberg

E143472

Louis Nirenberg was a Canadian-American mathematician renowned for his fundamental contributions to partial differential equations and geometric analysis.

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Label Occurrences
Louis Nirenberg canonical 7

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Canadian-American mathematician
human
mathematician
academicDegree Bachelor of Science
Doctor of Philosophy
awardReceived Abel Prize
Chern Medal
Charles Frankel Prize in the Humanities
surface form: Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities

Leroy P. Steele Prize
National Medal of Science
Leroy P. Steele Prize
surface form: Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement
countryOfCitizenship Canada
United States of America
dateOfBirth 1925-02-28
dateOfDeath 2020-01-26
describedBySource Notices of the American Mathematical Society
surface form: obituary in Notices of the American Mathematical Society
doctoralAdvisor James J. Stoker
educatedAt McGill University
New York University
employer New York University
surface form: Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences

New York University
familyName Nirenberg
fieldOfWork functional analysis
geometric analysis
mathematics
nonlinear analysis
partial differential equations
gender male
givenName Louis
knownFor Agmon–Douglis–Nirenberg estimates
Gagliardo–Nirenberg interpolation inequalities
Nirenberg problem in differential geometry
fundamental contributions to geometric analysis
fundamental contributions to partial differential equations
regularity theory for nonlinear PDEs
results on elliptic partial differential equations
languageOfWorkOrName English
memberOf American Academy of Arts and Sciences
National Academy of Sciences
Royal Society of Canada
notableStudent Joel Spruck
Luis Caffarelli
placeOfBirth Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
placeOfDeath New York City, New York, United States of America
positionHeld professor of mathematics
receivedAbelPrizeWith John Nash
surface form: John F. Nash Jr.
residence New York City
workplace New York University
surface form: Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences

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Referenced by (7)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Bôcher Memorial Prize notableRecipient Louis Nirenberg
Fritz John notableStudent Louis Nirenberg
Fritz John influenced Louis Nirenberg
Monge–Ampère equation studiedBy Louis Nirenberg
Kurt Friedrichs notableStudent Louis Nirenberg
Hans Lewy doctoralStudent Louis Nirenberg
Hans Lewy notableStudent Louis Nirenberg