Donald Clayton Spencer was an American mathematician, known for major work on deformation theory of structures arising in differential geometry, and on several complex variables from the point of view of partial differential equations. He was born in Boulder, Colorado, and educated at the University of Colorado and MIT. He wrote a Ph.D. in diophantine approximation under J. E. Littlewood at the University of Cambridge, completed in 1939.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Person/almaMater
dbpedia-owl:Person/birthDate
  • 1912-04-25 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:Person/birthPlace
dbpedia-owl:Person/deathDate
  • 2001-12-23 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:Person/nationality
dbpedia-owl:Scientist/doctoralAdvisor
dbpedia-owl:Scientist/doctoralStudent
dbpedia-owl:almaMater
dbpedia-owl:birthDate
  • 1912-04-25 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:birthPlace
dbpedia-owl:deathDate
  • 2001-12-23 (xsd:date)
dbpedia-owl:doctoralAdvisor
dbpedia-owl:doctoralStudent
dbpedia-owl:nationality
dbpprop:abstract
  • Donald Clayton Spencer was an American mathematician, known for major work on deformation theory of structures arising in differential geometry, and on several complex variables from the point of view of partial differential equations. He was born in Boulder, Colorado, and educated at the University of Colorado and MIT. He wrote a Ph.D. in diophantine approximation under J. E. Littlewood at the University of Cambridge, completed in 1939. He had positions at MIT and Stanford before his appointment in 1950 at Princeton University. There he was involved in a major series of collaborative works with Kunihiko Kodaira on the deformation of complex structures, which had a profound influence on the theory of complex manifolds and algebraic geometry, and the conception of moduli spaces. He also was led to formulate the d-bar Neumann problem, for the operator <math>\bar{\partial}</math> in PDE theory, to extend Hodge theory and the n-dimensional Cauchy-Riemann equations to the non-compact case. This is used to show existence theorems for holomorphic functions. He later worked on pseudogroups and their deformation theory, based on a fresh approach to overdetermined systems of PDEs (bypassing the Cartan-Kähler ideas based on differential forms by making an intensive use of jets). Formulated at the level of various chain complexes, this gives rise to what is now called Spencer cohomology, a subtle and difficult theory both of formal and of analytical structure. This is a kind of Koszul complex theory, taken up by numerous mathematicians during the 1960s. In particular a theory for Lie equations formulated by Malgrange emerged, giving a very broad formulation of the notion of integrability.
  • Donald C. Spencer war ein US-amerikanischer Mathematiker, der vor allem in algebraischer Geometrie und Analysis (u.a. partielle Differentialgleichungen) arbeitete.
dbpprop:almaMater
dbpprop:birthDate
dbpprop:birthPlace
dbpprop:deathDate
dbpprop:doctoralAdvisor
dbpprop:doctoralStudents
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:name
  • Donald Spencer
dbpprop:nationality
dbpprop:reference
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbpprop:workplaces
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Donald Clayton Spencer was an American mathematician, known for major work on deformation theory of structures arising in differential geometry, and on several complex variables from the point of view of partial differential equations. He was born in Boulder, Colorado, and educated at the University of Colorado and MIT. He wrote a Ph.D. in diophantine approximation under J. E. Littlewood at the University of Cambridge, completed in 1939.
  • Donald C. Spencer war ein US-amerikanischer Mathematiker, der vor allem in algebraischer Geometrie und Analysis (u.a. partielle Differentialgleichungen) arbeitete.
rdfs:label
  • Donald C. Spencer
  • Donald Spencer
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:name
  • Donald Spencer
foaf:page
is dbpedia-owl:Scientist/doctoralAdvisor of
is dbpedia-owl:Scientist/doctoralStudent of
is dbpedia-owl:doctoralAdvisor of
is dbpedia-owl:doctoralStudent of
is dbpprop:doctoralAdvisor of
is dbpprop:doctoralStudents of
is dbpprop:redirect of
is owl:sameAs of