Vojtěch Rödl

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vojtěch Rödl (born 1 April 1949[1]) is a Czech American mathematician, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor at Emory University. He is noted for his contributions mainly to combinatorics having authored hundreds of research papers.

Academic Background

Rödl obtained his PhD from the School of Mathematics and Physics at

Zdeněk Hedrlín
.

From 1973 to 1987 he lectured at the School of Nuclear and Physical Engineering at the

Bell Laboratories, Microsoft, Charles University, Mathematical Institute of the Czech Academy of Science, Bielefeld University, as well as at Humboldt University in Berlin
.

He serves on the editorial board of several international journals.

He has given lectures at many conferences, including plenary address in 2014 at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Seoul and an invited lecture in 1990 at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyoto.

He has several joint publications with Paul Erdős, and so has Erdős number one.[2]

Research

Rödl has published more than four hundred papers, mostly in combinatorics. He is mostly known for his contributions to Ramsey theory, extremal problems, and probabilistic combinatorics.

Awards

In 1983 with P. Frankl he solved a 1000$ problem of Paul Erdős. Since 2010 Rödl has been a Foreign Fellow of the Czech Learned Society.

Books

See also

References

  1. ^ "Foreign Fellows of the Learned Society : Rödl Vojtěch". Learned Society of the Czech Republic.
  2. ISSN 0012-365X
    .

External links