William Hamilton Meeks, III (born 8 August 1947) is an American mathematician, specializing in differential geometry and minimal surfaces.
Meeks studied at the University of California, Berkeley, with a bachelor's degree in 1971, a master's degree in 1974, and a PhD in 1975 with supervisor H. Blaine Lawson and thesis The Conformal Structure and Geometry of Triply Periodic Minimal Surfaces in R 3 {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{3}} .[1][2] He was an assistant professor in 1975–1977 at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in 1977–1978 at the Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (IMPA), and in 1978–1979 at Stanford University. From 1979 to 1983 he was a professor at IMPA. He was from 1983 to 1984 a visiting member of the Institute for Advanced Study and from 1984 to 1986 a professor at Rice University with the academic year 1985–1986 spent as a visiting professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. From 1986 to 2018 he has been the George David Birkhoff Professor of Mathematics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.[3] He currently is at the Institute for Advanced Study after assuming professor emeritus status at UMass Amherst.[4]
He is known as an expert on minimal surfaces and their computer graphics visualization; on the latter subject he has collaborated with David Allen Hoffman. For the academic year 2006/07 Meeks was a Guggenheim Fellow.[3]
In 1986 at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berkeley, he was Invited Speaker with talk Recent progress on the geometry of surfaces in R 3 {\displaystyle R^{3}} and on the use of computer graphics as a research tool.[3]