Alexandre Eremenko (born 1954 in Kharkiv, Ukraine; Ukrainian: Олександр Емануїлович Єременко, transcription: Olexandr Emanuilowitsch Jeremenko)[1] is a Ukrainian-American mathematician who works in the fields of complex analysis and dynamical systems.
Academic career
Eremenko was born into a medical family. His father was a pathophysiologist, professor and head of the Department of pathophysiology at Ternopil National Medical University. His mother was an ophthalmologist. He obtained his master's degree from Lviv University in 1976 and worked in the Institute of Low temperature physics and Engineering in Kharkiv until 1990. He received his PhD from Rostov State University in 1979 (Asymptotic Properties of Meromorphic and Subharmonic Functions), and is currently a distinguished professor at Purdue University.[2]
In complex dynamics, Eremenko explored escaping sets at the iteration of entire, transcendent functions and conjectured that the connected components of this escaping set are unbounded (Eremenko's conjecture). The conjecture is still open.
Distinctions
Eremenko was a recipient of the Humboldt Prize in Mathematics. In 2013, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society, for "contributions to value distribution theory, geometric function theory, and other areas of analysis and complex dynamics".[3] He was an invited speaker in the International congress of mathematicians in Beijing in 2002.
See also
References
- ↑ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-02-14. Retrieved 2015-05-31.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ "Alexandre E Eremenko". Purdue University. Retrieved 2012-01-29.
- ↑ 2014 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2013-11-04.