Peter Clive SarnakFRSMAE[3] (born 18 December 1953) is a South African-born mathematician with dual South-African and American nationalities.[1] Sarnak has been a member of the permanent faculty of the School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study since 2007.[4] He is also Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University since 2002, succeeding Sir Andrew Wiles, and is an editor of the Annals of Mathematics. He is known for his work in analytic number theory.[4] He was member of the Board of Adjudicators and for one period chairman of the selection committee for the Mathematics award, given under the auspices of the Shaw Prize.
Sarnak has made contributions to analysis and number theory.[3] He is recognised as one of the leading analytic number theorists of his generation.[3] His early work on the existence of cusp forms led to the disproof of a conjecture of Atle Selberg.[3] He has obtained the strongest known bounds towards the Ramanujan–Petersson conjectures for sparse graphs, and he was one of the first to exploit connections between certain questions of theoretical physics and analytic number theory.[3] There are fundamental contributions to arithmetical quantum chaos, a term which he introduced, and to the relationship between random matrix theory and the zeros of L-functions.[3] His work on subconvexity for Rankin–Selberg L-functions led to the resolution of Hilbert's eleventh problem.[3] During his career he has held numerous appointments including:
(joint author) Random Matrices, Frobenius Eigenvalues and Monodromy, 1998
Peter Sarnak (2000). "Some problems in Number Theory, Analysis and Mathematical Physics". In V. I. Arnold; M. Atiyah; P. Lax; B. Mazur (eds.). Mathematics: frontiers and perspectives. American Mathematical Society. pp. 261–269. ISBN978-0-8218-2697-3.
(joint editor) Selected Works of Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro (Collected Works), 2000
^"פרופ' פיטר סרנק". Wolffund.org.il. 13 February 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
^Sarnak, Peter (1990). "Diophantine problems and linear groups". Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, 1990, Kyoto. Vol. 1. pp. 459–471.
^Sarnak, Peter (1998). "-functions". Doc. Math. (Bielefeld) Extra Vol. ICM Berlin, 1998, vol. I. pp. 453–465.