Troels Jørgensen
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Troels Jørgensen
Summary
Troels Jørgensen is a human[1]. He worked as a mathematician[2]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #7,300 of 1,000,298).[3]
Key Facts
- Troels Jørgensen held citizenship in Kingdom of Denmark[4].
- Troels Jørgensen worked as a mathematician[2].
- Troels Jørgensen's field of work was hyperbolic geometry[5].
- Troels Jørgensen's field of work was complex analysis[6].
- Troels Jørgensen was employed by Columbia University[7].
- Troels Jørgensen's education included a stint at University of Copenhagen[8].
- Troels Jørgensen's doctoral advisor was Werner Fenchel[9].
- Troels Jørgensen's doctoral advisor was Bent Fuglede[10].
- A notable work attributed to Troels Jørgensen is Jørgensen's inequality[11].
- Troels Jørgensen is recorded as male[12].
- Troels Jørgensen's instance of is recorded as human[13].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Mikhail Katz as a doctoral student[14].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Peter Klein as a doctoral student[15].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Joseph A. Datskovsky as a doctoral student[16].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Kevin Smith as a doctoral student[17].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Masaaki Wada as a doctoral student[18].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Antonio Lascurain-Orive as a doctoral student[19].
- Troels Jørgensen supervised Hanna M. Sandler as a doctoral student[20].
- Troels Jørgensen's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 29632[21].
- Troels Jørgensen's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0gg7j80[22].
- Troels Jørgensen's family name is recorded as Jørgensen[23].
- Troels Jørgensen's given name is recorded as Troels[24].
- Troels Jørgensen's zbMATH author ID is recorded as jorgensen.troels[25].
- Troels Jørgensen's MR Author ID is recorded as 95810[26].
- Troels Jørgensen's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[27].
Body
Education
Troels Jørgensen's education included a stint at University of Copenhagen[8]. Doctoral advisors include Werner Fenchel[9], a mathematician[28], 1905–1988[29], of Kingdom of Denmark[30], specialised in differential geometry[31] and Bent Fuglede[10], a mathematician[32], 1925–2023[33], of Kingdom of Denmark[34], awarded the Knight of the 1st Class of the Order of the Dannebrog[35], specialised in mathematics[36].
Career and Affiliations
Troels Jørgensen worked as a mathematician[2]. Fields of work include hyperbolic geometry[5], a branch of mathematics[37] and complex analysis[6], a branch of mathematics[38]. Among his employers was Columbia University[7]. Doctoral students include Mikhail Katz[14], a mathematician[39], b. 1958[40], of Israel[41], specialised in differential geometry[42]; Peter Klein[15]; Joseph A. Datskovsky[16]; Kevin Smith[17]; Masaaki Wada[18]; and Antonio Lascurain-Orive[19], a professor of mathematics[43].
Works and Contributions
A notable work attributed to Troels Jørgensen is Jørgensen's inequality[11].
Why It Matters
Troels Jørgensen ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1 views/month, #7,300 of 1,000,298).[3]
FAQs
What did Troels Jørgensen do for work?
Troels Jørgensen worked as mathematician[2].
Where did Troels Jørgensen go to school?
Troels Jørgensen was educated at University of Copenhagen[8].