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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › James_GlimmJames Glimm - Wikipedia

    James Gilbert Glimm (born March 24, 1934) is an American mathematician, former president of the American Mathematical Society, and distinguished professor at Stony Brook University. He has made many contributions in the areas of pure and applied mathematics.

  2. James Gilbert Glimm (Peoria, 24 de março de 1934) é um físico matemático estadunidense. Ver também. Lista de membros da Academia Nacional de Ciências dos Estados Unidos (matemática) Ligações externas. James Glimm (em inglês) no Mathematics Genealogy Project; Home Page, at Stony Brook

  3. Dr. Glimm has made outstanding contributions to shock wave theory, and to the theory and computation of turbulence. He is a leading theorist in a number of other areas, including operator algebras, partial differential equations, mathematical physics, and applied mathematics.

  4. James Glimm, a noted mathematician whose work has revolutionized shock-wave theory and other fields of study, has been named a 2002 National Medal of Science Laureate. Raised in Westfield, Dr Glimm is the Director of the Center for Data Intensive Computing and Chair of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics at Stony Brook University.

  5. James Glimm. Distinguished Professor, Ph.D., 1959. Columbia Univ: Mathematical Physics; Nonlinear Waves. James Glimm has made fundamental contributions to nonlinear analysis—winning the Amer. Math. Soc. Steele Prize— to quantum field theory—winning the American Physical Soc. Heineman Prize—and to computational fluid dynamics.

  6. GlimmAnalytics platforms deliver accurate assessment of all return distribution quantiles. Our methodologies capture the main phenomena of asset returns with low and high frequency, including heavy tails, asymmetry of the return distribution, leverage effect and more.

  7. President 20072008. Ph.D. Columbia University, New York, NY, 1959. James Glimm was born in 1934 in Peoria, Illinois, and he received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Columbia University in 1959. He has made deep and original contributions in a variety of areas in both pure and applied mathematics.