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Mikio Sato Edit Profile

佐藤 幹夫

mathematician university professor

Mikio Sato, Japanese mathematician, educator. Named Person of Cultural Merits, Ministry of Education, Japan, 1984; recipient Asahi Prize of Science, 1969, The Japan Academy prize, 1976, Fujiwara prize, 1987, Schock prize, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, 1997, Wolf prize in mathematics, Wolf Foundation, Israel, 2003. Member of United States National Academy of Sciences.

Background

Sato, Mikio was born on April 18, 1928 in Tokyo.

Education

He studied at the University of Tokyo and then did graduate study in physics as a student of Shin"ichiro Tomonaga.

Career

Since 1970, Sato has been professor at the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, of Kyoto University. He is known for his innovative work in a number of fields, such as prehomogeneous vector spaces and Bernstein–Sato polynomials. And particularly for his hyperfunction theory.

This theory initially appeared as an extension of the ideas of distribution theory.

lieutenant was soon connected to the local cohomology theory of Grothendieck, for which it was an independent origin and to expression in terms of sheaf theory. Further, it led to the theory of microfunctions, interest in microlocal aspects of linear partial differential equations and Fourier theory such as wave fronts, and ultimately to the current developments in Doctorate-module theory.

Participant of Mikio Sato"s hyperfunction theory is the modern theory of holonomic systems: Partial Differential Equations (PDEs) over-determined to the point of having finite-dimensional spaces of solutions. He also contributed basic work to non-linear soliton theory, with the use of Grassmannians of infinite dimension.

In number theory, he is known for the Sato–Tate conjecture on L-functions.

He also received the Schock Prize in 1997 and the Wolf Prize in 2003.

Achievements

  • Mikio Sato has been listed as a noteworthy mathematician, educator by Marquis Who's Who.

Membership

National Academy of Sciences]

He has been a member of the National Academy of Sciences since 1993.