Nobushige Kurokawa (黒川 信重, Kurokawa Nobushige, born 1952) is a Japanese mathematician working in number theory, especially analytic number theory, multiple trigonometric function theory, zeta functions and automorphic forms. He is currently a professor emeritus at Tokyo Institute of Technology.[1]

Nobushige Kurokawa
Born1952
Nationality Japan
Alma materTokyo Institute of Technology (Ph.D., 1982)[2]
Known forGeneralized Ramanujan conjecture[3]
Saito-Kurokawa conjecture
Absolute mathematics
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsTokyo Institute of Technology

Books

  • with Shin-ya Koyama, 多重三角関数論講義 (Lectures on multiple sine functions), 2010. Lectures notes originally from April–July 1991 at University of Tokyo.
  • with Shinya Koyama, Absolute Mathematics, 2010. (Japanese)
  • Pursuit of the Riemann Hypothesis: ABC to Z, 2012. (Japanese)
  • Beyond the Riemann Hypothesis: Deep Riemann Hypothesis (DRH), 2013. (Japanese)
  • Modern trigonometric function theory, 2013. (Japanese)
  • Principles of Absolute Mathematics, 2016. (Japanese)
  • The World of Absolute Mathematics: Riemann Hypothesis, Langlands conjecture, Sato conjecture, 2017. (Japanese)
  • with Shinya Koyama, Introduction to the ABC conjecture, 2018. (Japanese)

References

  1. Ishikura, Tetsuya. "Mathematician in KyotoJapan cracks formidable brainteaser". Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  2. "T2R2 Tokyo Tech Research Repository".
  3. Buzzard, Kevin. "Notes on Siegel Modular Forms" (PDF).


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