Quick Facts
Born:
February 23, 1951, Nagoya, Japan (age 74)
Awards And Honors:
Fields Medal (1990)

Mori Shigefumi (born February 23, 1951, Nagoya, Japan) is a Japanese mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1990 for his work in algebraic geometry.

Mori attended Kyōto University (B.A., 1973; M.A., 1975; Ph.D., 1978) and held an appointment there until 1980, when he went to Nagoya University. From 1990 to 2016 he was a professor at the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences at Kyōto, and he also served as director of the institute (2011–14). He subsequently moved to Kyōto’s Institute for Advanced Study.

Mori was awarded the Fields Medal at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyōto in 1990. In 1979 Mori proved Hartshorne’s conjecture, an unsolved problem in algebraic geometry. His most important work focused on the problem of classification of algebraic varieties—solution sets of systems of algebraic equations in some number of variables—in algebraic geometry. The problem of a full classification of algebraic varieties of dimension three was regarded as very difficult, and Mori developed new and powerful techniques to apply to the problem. These problems remain open for higher-dimensional algebraic varieties, although a number of specific results are known.

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Numbers and Mathematics

Mori’s publications include, with Herbert Clemens and János Kollár, Higher Dimensional Complex Geometry (1988).

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

algebraic geometry, study of the geometric properties of solutions to polynomial equations, including solutions in dimensions beyond three. (Solutions in two and three dimensions are first covered in plane and solid analytic geometry, respectively.)

Algebraic geometry emerged from analytic geometry after 1850 when topology, complex analysis, and algebra were used to study algebraic curves. An algebraic curve C is the graph of an equation f(xy) = 0, with points at infinity added, where f(xy) is a polynomial, in two complex variables, that cannot be factored. Curves are classified by a nonnegative integer—known as their genus, g—that can be calculated from their polynomial.

The equation f(xy) = 0 determines y as a function of x at all but a finite number of points of C. Since x takes values in the complex numbers, which are two-dimensional over the real numbers, the curve C is two-dimensional over the real numbers near most of its points. C looks like a hollow sphere with g hollow handles attached and finitely many points pinched together—a sphere has genus 0, a torus has genus 1, and so forth. The Riemann-Roch theorem uses integrals along paths on C to characterize g analytically.

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A birational transformation matches up the points on two curves via maps given in both directions by rational functions of the coordinates. Birational transformations preserve intrinsic properties of curves, such as their genus, but provide leeway for geometers to simplify and classify curves by eliminating singularities (problematic points).

An algebraic curve generalizes to a variety, which is the solution set of r polynomial equations in n complex variables. In general, the difference nr is the dimension of the variety—i.e., the number of independent complex parameters near most points. For example, curves have (complex) dimension one and surfaces have (complex) dimension two. The French mathematician Alexandre Grothendieck revolutionized algebraic geometry in the 1950s by generalizing varieties to schemes and extending the Riemann-Roch theorem.

Arithmetic geometry combines algebraic geometry and number theory to study integer solutions of polynomial equations. It lies at the heart of the British mathematician Andrew Wiles’s 1995 proof of Fermat’s last theorem.

Robert Alan Bix Harry Joseph D'Souza