James Ax

James Burton Ax (10 January 1937 11 June 2006)[1] was an American mathematician who proved several results in algebra and number theory by using model theory. He shared, with Simon B. Kochen, the seventh Frank Nelson Cole Prize in Number Theory, which was awarded for a series of three joint papers[2][3][4] on Diophantine problems.

James Ax
Born
James Burton Ax

(1937-01-10)January 10, 1937
DiedJune 11, 2006(2006-06-11) (aged 69)
NationalityAmerican
EducationStuyvesant High School
Alma materPolytechnic Institute of New York University
University of California, Berkeley
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsStanford University
Cornell University
Stony Brook University

Education and career

James Ax graduated from Peter Stuyvesant High School in New York City and then the Brooklyn Polytechnic University. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1961 under the direction of Gerhard Hochschild, with a dissertation on The Intersection of Norm Groups.[5] After one year at Stanford University, he joined the mathematics faculty at Cornell University. He spent the academic year 1965–1966 at Harvard University on a Guggenheim Fellowship. In 1969, he moved from Cornell to the mathematics department at Stony Brook University and remained on the faculty until 1977, when he retired from his academic career. In 1970 he was an Invited Speaker at the ICM in Nice with talk Transcendence and differential algebraic geometry.[6] In the 1970s, he worked on the fundamentals of physics, including an axiomatization of space-time and the group theoretical properties of the axioms of quantum mechanics. In the 1980s, he and James Simons founded a quantitative finance firm, Axcom Trading Advisors,[7][8] which was later acquired by Renaissance Technologies and renamed the Medallion Fund.[9] The latter fund was named after the Cole Prize won by James Ax and the Veblen Prize won by James Simons.

In the early 1990s, Ax retired from his financial career and went to San Diego, California, where he studied further on the foundations of quantum mechanics and also attended, at the University of California, San Diego, courses on playwriting and screenwriting. (In 2005 he completed a thriller screenplay entitled Bots.)

The Ax Library in the Department of Mathematics at the University of California, San Diego houses his mathematical books.

Selected publications

See also

References

  1. James Ax, Deaths of AMS Members, Notices of the AMS, January 2008, p. 67
  2. Ax, James B.; Kochen, Simon B. (1965). "Diophantine problems over local fields. I". American Journal of Mathematics. 87 (3): 605–630. doi:10.2307/2373065. JSTOR 2373065.
  3. Ax, James B.; Kochen, Simon B. (1965). "Diophantine problems over local fields. II". American Journal of Mathematics. 87 (3): 631–648. doi:10.2307/2373066. JSTOR 2373066.
  4. Ax, James B.; Kochen, Simon B. (1966). "Diophantine problems over local fields. III". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 83 (3): 437–456. doi:10.2307/1970476. JSTOR 1970476.
  5. James Ax at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. Ax, James. "Transcendence and differential algebraic geometry." In Actes du Congrés international des Mathématiciens (Nice, 1970), vol. 1, pp. 483–485. 1970.
  7. Patterson, Scott. The quants: How a new breed of math whizzes conquered wall street and nearly destroyed it. Crown Books, 2011, p. 110
  8. Zuckerman, Gregory (2019). The Man Who Solved The Market. ISBN 978-0735217980.
  9. Teitelbaum, Richard (January 2008), The Code Breaker, Bloomberg, Simons set up Ax with his own trading account, Axcom Ltd., which eventually gave birth to Medallion.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.