Mauro Francaviglia

Mauro Francaviglia (22 June 1953 – 24 June 2013) was an Italian mathematician born in Torino.[1][2][3]

Mauro Francaviglia
Born(1953-06-22)22 June 1953
Died24 June 2013(2013-06-24) (aged 60)
NationalityItalian
Alma materUniversità di Torino
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Calculus of variations
Mathematical physics
General relativity
Doctoral advisorDionigi Galletto

Biography

He obtained his degree in Mathematics at the University of Torino in 1975 and he was a Full Professor at the University of Torino. He has held this position since 1980, when he was 27 years old.[2] In addition to his many research contributions, he had also carried out an intense, deep and extended organisational and coordination activity in regards to teaching and researching in the fields of geometry, mechanics and mathematical physics. This activity took place within the renowned Turinese school of mathematical physics which had gathered at the Istituto di Fisica Matematica (Institute of Mathematical Physics) Joseph-Louis Lagrange (within the Institute of Mathematics of the University of Turin), numerous illustrious scholars and researches of this discipline, among whom Cataldo Agostinelli, Bruno Barberis, Sergio Benenti, Manuelita Bonadies, Paolo Cermelli, Lorenzo Fatibene, Marco Ferraris, Dionigi Galletto, Letterio Gatto, Marco Godina, Guido Magnano, Marcella Palese, Franco Pastrone, Giovanni Rastelli, Alessandro Spallicci, Maria Luisa Tonon, Ekkehart Winterroth. A collection of scientific contributions from part of his collaborators has been published by the International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics (2016, vol. 13, n. 8).

His scientific interests covered a wide range of topics, including the application of differential geometry in mathematical physics, classical mechanics, general relativity and field theories, calculus of variations, symmetries and conservation laws, quantization and thermodynamics. Over 300 lectures held at various institutions in Italy and abroad. He directed several national and international research projects.

Francaviglia was author of over 250 papers, three monographs, 11 encyclopaedia long entries, Editor of 19 volumes of Proceedings and Director of two CIME Courses. He organized 20 national and international conferences, among which several national conferences in General Relativity and the World Conference GR14 in Florence (1995).

He was member of the Scientific Council of CNR-GNFM (1980–1996). Co-founder (1984) and Managing Editor of Journal of Geometry and Physics. Life member of the GRG Society, founder (1990) and President (1992–1996 and 2008–2012) of the Italian Society for General Relativity and Gravitation (SIGRAV), he also served as a member of the Board of the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation (IGRG) for nine years (1986–1995).

Francaviglia was Associate Editor of the Journal of General Relativity and Gravitation since 1999 and Managing Editor of the International Journal of Geometrical Methods in Modern Physics.

Writings

  • Elements of Differential and Riemannian Geometry, Monographs and Textbooks in Physical Sciences, Lecture Notes 4 (Proceedings Summer School on "Geometrical Methods in Theoretical Physics", Ferrara 1987), Bibliopolis, Napoli, (1988).
  • Relativistic Theories (The Variational Formulation), XIII Scuola Estiva di Fisica Matematica, Ravello 1988, Quaderni del CNR, Gruppo Nazionale di Fisica Matematica, (1991).
  • (with L. Fatibene), Natural and Gauge-Natural Formalism for Classical Field Theories: A Geometric Perspective including Spinors and Gauge Theories, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, (2003).
gollark: For now it'd be neat if there were actually good AR glasses available. Google Glass got killed off, and there was this company called North doing similar stuff but... Google bought them and killed them off too.
gollark: Brains are very adaptable, so perhaps you could just dump data into some neurons in some useful format and hope it learns to decode it.
gollark: I'd be *interested* in brain-computer-interface stuff, but it'll probably be a while before it develops into something useful and the security implications are very ææææaa.
gollark: It's still stupid. If the data is *there*, you can read it, no way around that.
gollark: This is something where you could probably make it actually-secure-ish through asymmetric cryptography, but just using a symmetric algorithm and hoping nobody will ever dump the keys is moronically stupid.

References

  1. "Vaccari news quotidiano di filatelia, posta e collezionismo – VACCARI". Vaccarinews.it. Retrieved 2013-07-17.
  2. M. Ferraris; et al. (2014). "Obituary of professor Mauro Francaviglia". Int. J. Geom. Methods Mod. Phys. 11 (2): 1477001 (2 pages). doi:10.1142/S0219887814770015.
  3. Obituary of Professor Mauro Francaviglia
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