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Ravindra Shripad Kulkarni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ravindra Shripad Kulkarni (born 1942) is an Indian mathematician, specializing in differential geometry. He is known for the Kulkarni–Nomizu product.

Education and career

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Ravi S. Kulkarni received in 1968 his Ph.D. from Harvard University under Shlomo Sternberg with thesis Curvature and Metric.[1] For the academic year 1980–1981 he was a Guggenheim Fellow.[2]

After a research and teaching career spanning over 40 years in the US at Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University, Indiana University Bloomington, Queens College of the City University of New York and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He returned to India as Distinguished Professor and Director of Harish-Chandra Research Institute, one of three research institutes for Mathematics and Theoretical Physics in India, followed by a 7-year stint at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay as Mathematics Chair. He is interested in the philosophy of Mathematics and Science, and notes he has “…not yet figured out the enigma of how Ramanujan’s mind worked”.[3]

He has served as the president of the Ramanujan Mathematical Society.[4]

Selected publications

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as editor

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  • with Ulrich Pinkall: Conformal geometry. Aspects of Mathematics (proceedings of a seminar on conformal geometry at the Max-Planck Institute in 1985–1986). Braunsweig & Wiesbaden: Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn. 1988.[5]

References

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