Lackenby in 1997
Marc Lackenby is a professor of mathematics at the University of Oxford whose research concerns knot theory , low-dimensional topology , and group theory .
Lackenby studied mathematics at the University of Cambridge beginning in 1990, and earned his Ph.D. in 1997, with a dissertation on Dehn Surgery and Unknotting Operations supervised by W. B. R. Lickorish .[ 1] After positions as Miller Research Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley and as Research Fellow at Cambridge, he joined Oxford as a Lecturer and Fellow of St Catherine's in 1999. He was promoted to Professor at Oxford in 2006.[ 2]
Lackenby's research contributions include
a proof of a strengthened version of the 2π theorem on sufficient conditions for Dehn surgery to produce a hyperbolic manifold ,[L00]
a bound on the hyperbolic volume of a knot complement of an alternating knot ,[L04]
and a proof that every diagram of the unknot can be transformed into a diagram without crossings by only a polynomial number of Reidemeister moves .[L15] In February 2021 he announced a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi-polynomial time .[ 3]
Lackenby won the Whitehead Prize of the London Mathematical Society in 2003.[ 4]
In 2006, he won the Philip Leverhulme Prize in mathematics and statistics.[ 5]
He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2010.[ 6]
Selected publications
References
^ Marc Lackenby at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ Lackenby, Marc (September 2015), Curriculum Vitae (PDF) , retrieved 2016-01-21
^ Marc Lackenby announces a new unknot recognition algorithm that runs in quasi-polynomial time , Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford , 2021-02-03, retrieved 2021-02-03
^ List of LMS prize winners , London Mathematical Society , retrieved 2016-01-21
^ Report of the Leverhulme Trustees (PDF) , The Leverhulme Trust, 2006, retrieved 2016-01-21
^ ICM Plenary and Invited Speakers since 1897 , International Mathematical Union , retrieved 2016-01-21 .
External links
International National Academics