Vladimir Zakalyukin

Vladimir Mikhailovich Zakalyukin (in Russian: Владимир Михайлович Закалюкин; 9 July 1951 – 30 December 2011) was a Russian mathematician known for his research on singularity theory, differential equations, and optimal control theory.

Vladimir Mikhailovich Zakalyukin
Born(1951-07-09)9 July 1951
Died30 December 2011(2011-12-30) (aged 60)
NationalityRussia
Alma materMoscow State University
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsMoscow State University
University of Liverpool
Moscow Aviation Institute
Doctoral advisorVladimir Arnold

He obtained his Ph.D. at Moscow State University in 1977 (the thesis: "Lagrangian and Legendrian singularities"). His thesis advisor was Vladimir Arnold.[1] In 2007 he won the MAIK Nauka award for best research publication in Russian. He worked at the Moscow State University, the University of Liverpool, and the Moscow Aviation Institute.[2]

Selected publications

  • V. M. Zakalyukin, "Lagrangian and Legendrian singularities", Functional Analysis and Its Applications, 1976.
  • V. M. Zakalyukin, "Reconstructions of fronts and caustics depending on a parameter and versality of mappings", Journal of Soviet Mathematics, 1984.
  • V. M. Zakalyukin, "Singularities of Circle-Surface Contacts and Flags", Functional Analysis and Its Applications, 1997.
  • V. V. Goryunov, V. M. Zakalyukin, "Simple symmetric matrix singularities and the subgroups of Weyl groups Aμ, Dμ, Eμ", Mosc. Math. J., 3:2 (2003).
  • J.-P. Gauthier, V. M. Zakalyukin, "On the motion planning problem, complexity, entropy, and nonholonomic interpolation", J. Dyn. Control Syst., 12:3 (2006).
gollark: Presumably most of the data on the actual network links is encrypted. If you control the hardware you can read the keys out of memory or something (or the decrypted data, I suppose), but it's at least significantly harder and probably more detectable than copying cleartext traffic.
gollark: Well, yes, but people really like blindly unverifiably trusting if it's convenient.
gollark: Or you can actually offer something much nicer and better in some way, a "killer app" for decentralized stuff, but if you do that and it's not intrinsically tied to the decentralized thing the big platforms will just copy it.
gollark: Yes, users are bad and won't care unless something directly affects them.
gollark: Also, in my experience the more privacy-friendly stuff also is more lightweight due to being designed with a mindset of doing it well and not adding excessive features, versus Facebook and whoever just using whatever allows them to get better time to market and shove in 2000 different weird features ~~stolen from~~ inspired by other platforms.

References


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