Andrei Knyazev (mathematician)

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Andrew Knyazev
Vyacheslav Ivanovich Lebedev
Websitehttps://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-knyazev/

Andrew Knyazev is an American

).

From 1993–1994, Knyazev held a visiting position at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University, collaborating with Olof B. Widlund.[1] From 1994 until retirement in 2014, he was a Professor of Mathematics at the University of Colorado Denver, supported by the National Science Foundation[2] and United States Department of Energy grants. He was a recipient of the 2008 Excellence in Research Award,[3] the 2000 college Teaching Excellence Award, and a finalist of the CU President's Faculty Excellence Award for Advancing Teaching and Learning through Technology in 1999.[4] He was awarded the title of Professor Emeritus at the University of Colorado Denver[5] and named the SIAM Fellow Class of 2016[6] and AMS Fellow Class of 2019.[7]

From 2012–2018, Knyazev worked at the

automotive data, and algorithms for silicon photonics
-based hardware.

Knyazev is mostly known for his work in numerical solution of large

Knyazev collaborated with John Osborn [13] on the theory of the Ritz method in the finite element method context and with

elliptic partial differential equations with large jumps in the main coefficients.[14]
Jointly with his Ph.D. students, Knyazev pioneered using majorization for bounds in the Rayleigh–Ritz method (see[15] and references there) and contributed to the theory of angles between flats.[16] [17]

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