Andrew Ogg

Andrew Ogg

Andrew Pollard Ogg (born April 9, 1934, Bowling Green, Ohio) is an American mathematician, a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley.[1]

Education

Ogg was a student at Bowling Green State University in the mid 1950s.[2][3][4] Ogg received his Ph.D. in 1961 from Harvard University under the supervision of John Tate.[5]

Career

Ogg worked in algebra and number theory. His accomplishments include the Grothendieck–Ogg–Shafarevich formula, Ogg's formula for the conductor of an elliptic curve, the Néron–Ogg–Shafarevich criterion and the 1975 characterization of supersingular primes, the starting point for the theory of monstrous moonshine.[6] He also posed the torsion conjecture in 1973[7] and is the author of the book Modular forms and Dirichlet series (W. A. Benjamin, 1969).

References

  1. ^ Faculty listing, Berkeley mathematics, retrieved 2011-04-09.
  2. ^ "The Key 1956". BGSU Key Yearbooks. 1 January 1956. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
  3. ^ "The B-G News May 25, 1956". BG News (Student Newspaper). 25 May 1956. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  4. ^ "The B-G News September 30, 1955". BG News (Student Newspaper). 30 September 1955. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  5. ^ Andrew Ogg at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ Gannon, Terry (2006), Moonshine beyond the monster: the bridge connecting algebra, modular forms and physics, Cambridge monographs on mathematical physics, Cambridge University Press, p. 483, ISBN 978-0-521-83531-2, In hindsight, the first incarnation of Monstrous Moonshine goes back to Andrew Ogg in 1975.
  7. ^ Ogg, Andrew (1973). "Rational points on certain elliptic modular curves". Proc. Symp. Pure Math. Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics. 24: 221–231. doi:10.1090/pspum/024/0337974. ISBN 9780821814246.