American mathematician (born 1967)
Kevin B. Ford (born 22 December 1967) is an American mathematician working in analytic number theory .
Education and career
He has been a professor in the department of mathematics of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign since 2001. Prior to this appointment, he was a faculty member at the University of South Carolina .
Ford received a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Mathematics in 1990 from the California State University, Chico . He then attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , where he completed his doctoral studies in 1994 under the supervision of Heini Halberstam .
Research
Ford's early work focused on the distribution of Euler's totient function . In 1998, he published a paper that studied in detail the range of this function and established that Carmichael's totient function conjecture is true for all integers up to
10
10
10
{\displaystyle 10^{10^{10}}}
.[ 2]
In 1999, he settled Sierpinski’s conjecture on Euler's totient function .[ 3]
In August 2014, Kevin Ford, in collaboration with Green , Konyagin and Tao ,[ 4] resolved a longstanding conjecture of Erdős on large gaps between primes, also proven independently by James Maynard .[ 5]
The five mathematicians were awarded for their work the largest Erdős prize ($10,000) ever offered.
[ 6] In 2017, they improved their results in a joint paper.
[ 7]
He is one of the namesakes of the Erdős–Tenenbaum–Ford constant ,[ 8] named for his work using it in estimating the number of small integers that have divisors in a given interval.[ 9]
Recognition
In 2013, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society .[ 10]
References
^ Kevin Ford at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^
Ford, Kevin (1998). "The distribution of totients". Ramanujan Journal . 2 (1–2): 67–151. arXiv :1104.3264 . doi :10.1023/A:1009761909132 . S2CID 6232638 .
^ Ford, Kevin (1999). "The number of solutions of φ (x ) = m " . Annals of Mathematics . 150 (1). Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study: 283–311. doi :10.2307/121103 . JSTOR 121103 . Archived from the original on 2013-09-24. Retrieved 2019-04-19 .
^ Ford, Kevin; Green, Ben; Konyagin, Sergei; Tao, Terence (2016). "Large gaps between consecutive primes" . Annals of Mathematics . 183 (3): 935–974. arXiv :1408.4505 . doi :10.4007/annals.2016.183.3.4 . S2CID 16336889 .
^ Maynard, James (2016). "Large gaps between primes" . Annals of Mathematics . 183 (3). Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study: 915–933. arXiv :1408.5110 . doi :10.4007/annals.2016.183.3.3 . S2CID 119247836 .
^ Klarreich, Erica (22 December 2014). "Mathematicians Make a Major Discovery About Prime Numbers" . Wired . Retrieved 27 July 2015 .
^ Ford, Kevin; Green, Ben; Konyagin, Sergei; Maynard, James; Tao, Terence (2018). "Long gaps between primes" . Journal of the American Mathematical Society . 31 : 65–105. arXiv :1412.5029 . doi :10.1090/jams/876 .
^ Luca, Florian; Pomerance, Carl (2014). "On the range of Carmichael's universal-exponent function" (PDF) . Acta Arithmetica . 162 (3): 289–308. doi :10.4064/aa162-3-6 . MR 3173026 .
^ Koukoulopoulos, Dimitris (2010). "Divisors of shifted primes". International Mathematics Research Notices . 2010 (24): 4585–4627. arXiv :0905.0163 . doi :10.1093/imrn/rnq045 . MR 2739805 . S2CID 7503281 .
^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society , retrieved 2017-11-03.