Biography:Lê Dũng Tráng

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Lê Dũng Tráng, Kaiserslautern 2004

Lê Dũng Tráng, (born 1947 in Saigon) is a Vietnamese-French mathematician.

Life and work

At the end 1949, Lê Dũng Tráng came to France , where he attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris. He obtained a Ph.D. degree at the University of Paris in 1969 and 1971 under the supervision of Claude Chevalley and Pierre Deligne.[1] From 1975 to 1999, he was professor at the University of Paris VII and research director of the CNRS. From 1983 to 1995 he was also a professor at the École Polytechnique. From 2002 to 2009 he headed the department of mathematics at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), in Trieste, Italy.

He was a frequent guest scientist at Harvard University (with Heisuke Hironaka) and Northeastern University (with Terence Gaffney and David B. Massey).

He is particularly concerned with singularity theory in the complex domain (Milnor fibrations, perverse sheaves).

In 2000 he was involved in promoting scientific exchange between the United States and Vietnam.[2] For this, he received an honorary doctorate from the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology in 2004.[3] He is a Fellow of the Third World Academy of Sciences since 1993.

His students include Hélène Esnault and Claude Sabbah.

Selected publications

  • Some remarks on relative monodromy, Real and complex singularities 1 (Proc. Ninth Nordic Summer School), 397-403.
  • with Bernard Teissier, Variétés polaires locales et classes de Chern des variétés singulieres, Annals of Mathematics 114 (1981), 457-491.
  • Complex analytic functions with isolated singularities, Journal of Algebraic Geometry 1 (1992), 83-99.
  • with J.P. Brasselet and J. Seade, Euler obstruction and indices of vector fields, Topology 39 (2000), 1193-1208.

Literature

  • Jean-Paul Brasselet, José Luis Cisneros-Molina, David Massey, José Seade, Bernard Teissier (Editor) Singularities : international conference in honor of the 60th birthday of Lê Dũng Tráng, Cuernavaca/Mexico 2007, 2 volumes, Contemporary Mathematics, American Mathematical Society 2008.

References

External links