Nicholas Shepherd-Barron
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Nicholas Ian Shepherd-Barron, FRS (born 17 March 1955), is a British mathematician working in algebraic geometry. He is a professor of mathematics at King's College London.
Education and career
Shepherd-Barron was a scholar of Winchester College. He obtained his B.A. at Jesus College, Cambridge in 1976, and received his Ph.D. at the University of Warwick under the supervision of Miles Reid in 1981.[1][2]
In 2013, he moved from the University of Cambridge to King's College London.[3]
Research
Shepherd-Barron works in various aspects of algebraic geometry, such as: singularities in the minimal model program; compactification of moduli spaces; the rationality of orbit spaces, including the moduli spaces of curves of genus 4 and 6; the geography of algebraic surfaces in positive characteristic, including a proof of Raynaud's conjecture; canonical modelsTemplate:Efn of moduli spaces of abelian varieties; the Schottky problem at the boundary; the relation between algebraic groups and del Pezzo surfaces; the period map for elliptic surfaces.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In 2008, with the number theorists Michael Harris and Richard Taylor, he proved the original version of the Sato–Tate conjecture and its generalization to totally real fields, under mild assumptions.[4]
Awards and honors
Shepherd-Barron was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006.
Personal life
He is the son of John Shepherd-Barron, a British inventor, who was responsible for inventing the first cash machine in 1967.[5]
Notes
References
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1955 births
- Living people
- 20th-century British mathematicians
- 21st-century British mathematicians
- Algebraic geometers
- People educated at Winchester College
- Alumni of Jesus College, Cambridge
- Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Fellows of the Royal Society
- Academics of King's College London
- Professors of the University of Cambridge