Biography:Antoine Song
Antoine Song (born 18 July 1992 in Paris) is a French[1] mathematician whose research concerns differential geometry. In 2018, he proved Yau's conjecture. He is a Clay Research Fellow (2019–2024).[2] He obtained his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 2019 under the supervision of Fernando Codá Marques.[3]
Existence of minimal surfaces
It is known that any closed surface possesses infinitely many closed geodesics. The first problem in the minimal submanifolds section of Yau's list asks whether any closed three-manifold has infinitely many closed smooth immersed minimal surfaces. At the time it was known from Almgren–Pitts min-max theory the existence of at least one minimal surface. Kei Irie, Fernando Codá Marques, and André Neves solved this problem in the generic case [4] and later Antoine Song claimed it in full generality.[5]
Selected publications
- "Existence of infinitely many minimal hypersurfaces in closed manifolds" (2018)
- Joint with Marques and Neves: "Equidistribution of minimal hypersurfaces for generic metrics" (2019), Inventiones mathematicae
References
- ↑ Song's CV
- ↑ "Antoine Song | Clay Mathematics Institute". https://www.claymath.org/people/antoine-song.
- ↑ Antoine Song at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ "Density of minimal hypersurfaces for generic metrics | Annals of Mathematics". http://annals.math.princeton.edu/2018/187-3/p08.
- ↑ Song, Antoine (2018). "Existence of infinitely many minimal hypersurfaces in closed manifolds". arXiv:1806.08816 [math.DG].
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antoine Song.
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