Background
Eckmann is the son of mathematician Beno Eckmann.
Eckmann is the son of mathematician Beno Eckmann.
He completed his Doctor of Philosophy in 1970 under the supervision of Marcel Guenin at the University of Geneva.
In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. With Pierre Collet and Oscar Lanford, Eckmann was the first to find a rigorous mathematical argument for the universality of period-doubling bifurcations in dynamical systems, with scaling ratio given by the Feigenbaum constants. In a highly cited 1985 review paper with David Ruelle, he bridged the contributions of mathematicians and physicists to dynamical systems theory and ergodic theory, put the varied work on dimension-like notions in these fields on a firm mathematical footing, and formulated the Eckmann–Ruelle conjecture on the dimension of hyperbolic ergodic measures, "one of the main problems in the interface of dimension theory and dynamical systems".
A proof of the conjecture was finally published 14 years later, in 1999.
Eckmann has done additional mathematical work in very diverse fields such as statistical mechanics, partial differential equations, and graph theory. His Doctor of Philosophy students have included Viviane Baladi and Martin Hairer.
American Mathematical Society]
He has been a member of the Academia Europaea since 2001.