I just learned that French mathematician René Thom died on Nov. 17. He was awarded the Fields medal in 1958 for his work on cobordism theory, and is also well-known for originating catastrophe theory in the late 1960's. In case anyone's interested, the simplest case of cobordism theory defines an equivalence relation on all (compact and boundaryless) manifolds of a fixed dimension: two n-manifolds M,N are equivalent when there is an (n+1)-manifold W such that the boundary of W is M u N. With union as the additive operation, and cartesian product as the multiplication, the set of equivalence classes form a "graded algebra" over Z_2. Manifolds that are themselves the boundary of another manifold represent the zeros in this algebra, and it's over Z_2 since M u M is always the boundary of M x [0,1]. Thom's astonishingly elegant result is that this graded algebra over Z_2 has just one generator in each dimension *not* of the form 2^k - 1, for k >= 1. Put another way, the algebra is all polynomials over Z_2 formed by 1=x0 (represented by the point), x_2, x_4, x_5, x_6, x_8, x_9, etc., where the degree of any monomial is the sum of the indices of its factors. (The monomials of a given degree correspond to the equivalence classes among connected manifolds of that dimension.) Hence, among connected manifolds there are just two "cobordism" classes {0, x_2} in dimension 2; just one {0} in dimensions 1 or 3 (i.e. every manifold of dimension 1 or 3 is the boundary of another manifold), and e.g. three in dimension 9: {0, x_4 * x_5, x_9}. --Dan
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002 asimovd@aol.com wrote:
I just learned that French mathematician Ren� Thom died on Nov. 17. He was
Apparently he died on October 25th. There was an obit in the NY Times and some discussion on the mailing list Historia Mathematica at http://mathforum.org/epigone/historia_matematica/wimfaldblil --Edwin
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Edwin Clark