Annette Werner (born 1966)[1] is a German mathematician. Her research interests include diophantine geometry and the algebraic geometry of non-Archimedean ordered fields, including the study of buildings, Berkovich spaces, and tropical geometry. She is a professor of mathematics at Goethe University Frankfurt.[2]
Education and career
Werner earned a diploma in mathematics from the University of Münster in 1991.[2] She earned her Ph.D. at the same university in 1995, jointly supervised by Christopher Deninger and Siegfried Bosch; her dissertation was Local Heights on Uniformized Abelian Varieties and on Mumford Curves.[2][3] She also completed her habilitation at Münster in 2000.[2]
She worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn in 1997–1998, and as an assistant at Münster from 1998 to 2003. She became a professor at the University of Siegen in 2004, but in the same year moved to the University of Stuttgart. She has been at the University of Frankfurt since 2007.[2]
Book
Werner is the author of a German-language book on elliptic curve cryptography, Elliptische Kurven in der Kryptographie (Springer, 2002).
Recognition
Werner was Emmy Noether Lecturer of the German Mathematical Society in Munich in 2010.[2][4]
References
- ↑ Birth year from author information for her edited volume with Katrin Wendland, Facettenreiche Mathematik: Einblicke in die moderne mathematische Forschung für alle, die mehr von Mathematik verstehen wollen (Springer, 2011), p. 461.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Wissenschaftlicher Werdegang von Prof. Dr. Annette Werner (PDF) (in German)
- ↑ Annette Werner at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Preise und Auszeichnungen (in German), German Mathematical Society, retrieved 2018-11-05