Christoph Thiele
Christoph Thiele (born 1968 in
UCLA, where he was promoted to full professor, he occupied the Hausdorff Chair at the University of Bonn.[1]
He is famous for work (joint with Michael Lacey) on the bilinear Hilbert transform and for giving a simplified proof of Carleson's theorem; the techniques in this proof have deeply influenced the field of time–frequency analysis. He was a recipient of the 1996 Salem Prize,[2] an invited speaker at the 2002 International Congress of Mathematicians[3] and a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[4]
Selected publications
- Lacey, Michael T. (2004), "Carleson's theorem: proof, complements, variations", Publicacions Matemàtiques, 48 (2): 251–307, S2CID 16121272
- Lacey, Michael; Thiele, Christoph (2000), "A proof of boundedness of the Carleson operator", Mathematical Research Letters, 7 (4): 361–370, MR 1783613
References
- ^ "HCM: Prof. Dr. Christoph Thiele".
- ^ "Prix Salem". Laboratoire de Mathématiques Raphaël Salem (in French). Retrieved 15 November 2023.
- ^ "ICM Plenary and Invited Speakers | International Mathematical Union (IMU)".
- ^ "Fellows of the American Mathematical Society".