Claire Voisin

Claire Voisin

Claire Voisin in 2009
Born (1962-03-04) 4 March 1962
Saint-Leu-la-Forêt, Île-de-France
Nationality French
Fields Mathematics
Institutions University of Paris VI: Pierre et Marie Curie
École Polytechnique
Collège de France
Alma mater École Normale Supérieure
Paris-Sud 11 University
Doctoral advisor Arnaud Beauville
Doctoral students Anna Otwinowska
Gianluca Pacienza
Lorenz Schneider
Known for Algebraic Geometry
Hodge theory
Notable awards EMS Prize (1992)
Sophie Germain Prize (2003)
Satter Prize (2007)
Clay Research Award (2008)
Heinz Hopf Prize (2015)
CNRS Gold medal (2016)

Claire Voisin (born 4 March 1962) is a French mathematician known for work in algebraic geometry.

Work

She is noted for her work in algebraic geometry particularly as it pertains to variations of Hodge structures and mirror symmetry, and has written several books on Hodge theory. In 2002 Voisin proved that the generalization of the Hodge conjecture for compact Kähler varieties is false.[1] The Hodge conjecture is one of the seven Clay Mathematics Institute Millennium Prize Problems which were selected in 2000, each having a prize of one million US dollars.

Voisin won the European Mathematical Society Prize in 1992, and the Servant Prize awarded by the Academy of Sciences in 1996.[2] She received the Sophie Germain Prize in 2003[3] and the Clay Research Award in 2008 for her disproof of the Kodaira conjecture on deformations of compact Kähler manifolds.[4] In 2007 she was awarded the Ruth Lyttle Satter Prize in Mathematics for, in addition to her work on the Kodaira conjecture, solving the generic case of Green's conjecture on the syzygies of the canonical embedding of an algebraic curve.[5] The generic case of Green's conjecture had received considerable attention from algebraic geometers for over two decades prior to its resolution by Voisin (the full conjecture for arbitrary curves is still partially open).

Voisin at Queen Mary University in 2014

She was an invited speaker at the 1994 International Congress of Mathematicians (Zurich) in the section 'Algebraic Geometry', and she was also invited as a plenary speaker at the 2010 International Congress of Mathematicians, Hyderabad, India.[6] In 2014 she was elected to the Academia Europaea.[7] In May 2016 she was elected as a foreign associate of the National Academy of Sciences.[8] Also in 2016, she became the first female mathematician member of the Collège de France and is the first holder of the Chair of Algebraic Geometry.[9] She received the Gold medal of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in September 2016. The latter is the highest scientific research award in France.[10]

Personal Life

She is married to applied mathematician Jean-Michel Coron. They have five children.[11]

Selected publications

References

External links

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