Avner Ash
Avner Ash is a professor of mathematics at Boston College.[1]
Ash received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1975 under the supervision of David Mumford.[2]
In 2012, Ash became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[3]
Works
- Avner Ash; Robert Gross (2008). Fearless Symmetry:Exposing the Hidden Patterns of Numbers. Princeton University Press. ISBN 1-400-83777-4.
- Avner Ash; Peter Scholze (2010). Smooth Compactifications of Locally Symmetric Varieties. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-73955-1.
- Avner Ash; Robert Gross (2012). Elliptic Tales: Curves, Counting, and Number Theory. Princeton University Press. ISBN 1-400-84171-2.
- Avner Ash; Robert Gross (2016). Summing It Up: From One Plus One to Modern Number Theory. Princeton University Press. ISBN 1-400-88053-X.
gollark: Sure, but it should still be feared.
gollark: https://openai.com/blog/vpt/
gollark: There was a government program to fund fibre connectivity, but it doesn't seem to have worked well.
gollark: A lot of developed countries seem to have issues like this because the old stuff technically works and has tons of inertia and regulatory nonsense and nobody cares enough to replace it, but developing ones which didn't have big telephone networks or whatever presumably just installed fibre and did fine.
gollark: The UK isn't very good at infrastructure.
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-15. Retrieved 2015-08-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Avner Ash at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
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