Douglas C. Ravenel
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Douglas Conner Ravenel (born 1947) is an American mathematician known for work in algebraic topology.


Life

Ravenel received his PhD from Brandeis University in 1972 under the direction of
Edgar H. Brown, Jr. Edgar Henry Brown, Jr. (December 27, 1926 – December 22, 2021) was an American mathematician specializing in algebraic topology, and for many years a professor at Brandeis University. Life Brown was born in Oak Park, Illinois, Oak Park, Illin ...
with a thesis on exotic characteristic classes of spherical fibrations. From 1971 to 1973 he was a C. L. E. Moore instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and in 1974/75 he visited the Institute for Advanced Study. He became an assistant professor at Columbia University in 1973 and at the University of Washington in Seattle in 1976, where he was promoted to associate professor in 1978 and professor in 1981. From 1977 to 1979 he was a Sloan Fellow. Since 1988 he has been a professor at the University of Rochester. He was an
invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians This is a list of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited Speakers. Being invited to talk at an International Congress of Mathematicians has been called "the equivalent, in this community, of an induction to a hall of fame." ...
in Helsinki, 1978, and is an editor of
The New York Journal of Mathematics The ''New York Journal of Mathematics'' is a peer-reviewed journal focusing on algebra, analysis, geometry and topology. Its editorial board, , consists of 17 university-affiliated scholars in addition to the Editor-in-chief. Articles in the ''New ...
since 1994. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. In 2022 he received the Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry.


Work

Ravenel's main area of work is
stable homotopy theory In mathematics, stable homotopy theory is the part of homotopy theory (and thus algebraic topology) concerned with all structure and phenomena that remain after sufficiently many applications of the suspension functor. A founding result was the F ...
. Two of his most famous papers are ''Periodic phenomena in the Adams–Novikov spectral sequence'', which he wrote together with Haynes R. Miller and W. Stephen Wilson ( Annals of Mathematics 106 (1977), 469–516) and ''Localization with respect to certain periodic homology theories'' ( American Journal of Mathematics 106 (1984), 351–414). In the first of these two papers, the authors explore the stable homotopy groups of spheres by analyzing the E^2-term of the Adams–Novikov spectral sequence. The authors set up the so-called chromatic spectral sequence relating this E^2-term to the cohomology of the Morava stabilizer group, which exhibits certain periodic phenomena in the Adams–Novikov spectral sequence and can be seen as the beginning of chromatic homotopy theory. Applying this, the authors compute the second line of the Adams–Novikov spectral sequence and establish the non-triviality of a certain family in the stable homotopy groups of spheres. In all of this, the authors use work by
Jack Morava Jack Johnson Morava is an American homotopy theorist at Johns Hopkins University. Education Of Czech and Appalachian descent, he was raised in Texas' lower Rio Grande valley. An early interest in topology was strongly encouraged by his paren ...
and themselves on
Brown–Peterson cohomology In mathematics, Brown–Peterson cohomology is a generalized cohomology theory introduced by , depending on a choice of prime ''p''. It is described in detail by . Its representing spectrum is denoted by BP. Complex cobordism and Quillen's idempot ...
and
Morava K-theory In stable homotopy theory, a branch of mathematics, Morava K-theory is one of a collection of cohomology theories introduced in algebraic topology by Jack Morava in unpublished preprints in the early 1970s. For every prime number ''p'' (which is sup ...
. In the second paper, Ravenel expands these phenomena to a global picture of stable homotopy theory leading to the
Ravenel conjectures In mathematics, the Ravenel conjectures are a set of mathematical conjectures in the field of stable homotopy theory posed by Douglas Ravenel at the end of a paper published in 1984. It was earlier circulated in preprint. The problems involved h ...
. In this picture, complex cobordism and Morava K-theory control many qualitative phenomena, which were understood before only in special cases. Here Ravenel uses
localization Localization or localisation may refer to: Biology * Localization of function, locating psychological functions in the brain or nervous system; see Linguistic intelligence * Localization of sensation, ability to tell what part of the body is a ...
in the sense of
Aldridge K. Bousfield Aldridge Knight Bousfield (April 5, 1941 – October 4, 2020), known as "Pete", was an American mathematician working in algebraic topology, known for the concept of Bousfield localization. Work and life Bousfield obtained both his undergrad ...
in a crucial way. All but one of the Ravenel conjectures were proved by Ethan Devinatz,
Michael J. Hopkins Michael Jerome Hopkins (born April 18, 1958) is an American mathematician known for work in algebraic topology. Life He received his PhD from Northwestern University in 1984 under the direction of Mark Mahowald, with thesis ''Stable Decompositio ...
and Jeff Smith not long after the article got published.
Frank Adams John Frank Adams (5 November 1930 – 7 January 1989) was a British mathematician, one of the major contributors to homotopy theory. Life He was born in Woolwich, a suburb in south-east London, and attended Bedford School. He began research ...
said on that occasion: In further work, Ravenel calculates the Morava K-theories of several spaces and proves important theorems in chromatic homotopy theory together with Hopkins. He was also one of the founders of elliptic cohomology. In 2009, he solved together with Michael Hill and Michael Hopkins the
Kervaire invariant In mathematics, the Kervaire invariant is an invariant of a framed (4k+2)-dimensional manifold that measures whether the manifold could be surgically converted into a sphere. This invariant evaluates to 0 if the manifold can be converted to a sphe ...
1 problem for large dimensions. Ravenel has written two books, the first on the calculation of the stable homotopy groups of spheres and the second on the Ravenel conjectures, colloquially known among topologists respectively as the green and orange books (though the former is no longer green, but burgundy, in its current edition).


Selected work


''Complex cobordism and the stable homotopy groups of spheres''
Academic Press 1986, 2nd edition, AMS 2003, onlin



Princeton, Annals of Mathematical Studies 1992


External links

* at the University of Rochester *


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ravenel, Douglas 1947 births 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians Living people Fellows of the American Mathematical Society Topologists Brandeis University alumni University of Rochester faculty Columbia University faculty University of Washington faculty Sloan Research Fellows Institute for Advanced Study people Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Science faculty