Craig Tracy

Craig Arnold Tracy (born September 9, 1945) is an American mathematician, known for his contributions to mathematical physics and probability theory.

Craig Tracy

Born in United Kingdom, he moved as infant to Missouri where he grew up and obtained a B.Sc. in physics from University of Missouri (1967). He studied as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at the Stony Brook University where he obtained a Ph.D. on the thesis entitled Spin-Spin Scale-Functions in the Ising and XY-Models (1973) advised by Barry M. McCoy,[1] in which (also jointly with Tai Tsun Wu and Eytan Barouch) he studied Painlevé functions in exactly solvable statistical mechanical models.

He then was on the faculty of Dartmouth College (197884) before joining University of California, Davis (1984) where he is now a professor.[2] With Harold Widom he worked on the asymptotic analysis of Toeplitz determinants and their various operator theoretic generalizations. This work gave them both the George Pólya and the Norbert Wiener prizes, and the Tracy–Widom distribution is named after them.

Awards


gollark: helloboi.tk? Yes, anything in your www folder is exposed there.
gollark: No idea.
gollark: WRONG. They don't know what you will do → wrong → bad → make macron.
gollark: ++remind 19/03/2021 incident 8013-E
gollark: I never had significant issues with xbps or pacman or anything else, really.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.