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Noted Geometer Shiing-Shen Chern Has Died
Posted on: 12/09/2004 08:33 AM

It is with great sorrow that we announce the death of noted geometer, colleague and friend, Shiing-Shen Chern.

Dr. Shiing-Shen Chern, 93, one of the greatest geometers of the 20th century and a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, died Dec. 3 at his home in the Chinese city of Tianjin.

A quote from the December 7, 2004, issue of the New York Times:

NEW YORK TIMES
December 7, 2004

Obituary: Shiing-Shen Chern, 93, Innovator in New Geometry, Dies

By Kenneth Chang

Dr. Shiing-Shen Chern, a mathematician whose seemingly purely abstract discoveries about the twistings of geometric surfaces have found wide use in physics and mathematics, died Friday at his home in Tianjin, China. He was 93.

Dr. Chern also helped set up three mathematics institutes, two in China and one at the University of California, Berkeley. Nankai University, where Dr. Chern established an institute in 1985, reported his death.

"He's a towering figure in 20th-century mathematics," said Dr. Calvin C. Moore, a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley.

Dr. Chern's work in a field called differential geometry looked at the way the curvature of a surface can tell something about the overall shape. For example, someone standing on a sphere will see the surface dropping off in all directions. But on other shapes, like that of a doughnut, there must be places - around the hole, in particular - where the surface is shaped like a saddle, curving upward in some directions.

The field was pioneered in the 19th century by Carl Friedrich Gauss, who wanted to know how to accurately survey the landscape of a curved planet, but interest had waned by the 1930's, Studying the curvature of surfaces in spaces greater than three dimensions, Dr. Chern devised mathematical quantities, which he called characteristic classes, that differentiated different types of surfaces. "Everyone else in the world called them Chern classes," Dr. Moore said.

For example, a strip of paper whose ends are glued together as a ring is in a different Chern class than one that has been twisted into a Möbius strip. "Chern classes measure the degree of twisting in different dimensions," said Dr. Jeff Cheeger, a professor of mathematics at New York University.

Chern classes and later advances in differential geometry have now found applications in fields as diverse as string theory in theoretical physics and computer graphics. "I think that he, more than anyone, was the founder of one of the central areas of modern mathematics," said Dr. Phillip A. Griffiths, a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J.

Born in 1911 in Jiaxing, China, Shiing-Shen Chern started college at Nankai University in Tianjin at 15. He finished his doctorate in just a year and a half at the University of Hamburg in Germany.

He accepted a professorship at Qinghua University in Beijing, but World War II disrupted those plans. After teaching for several years at temporary campuses, Dr. Chern fled China - a circuitous westward journey on a series of military flights, through India, Africa, Brazil, Central America and Miami - to pursue his research at the Institute for Advanced Study.

He returned to China after World War II and helped found a mathematics institute for Academia Sinica. The civil war in China led Dr. Chern to leave China again and return to the Institute for Advanced Study. He became a professor at the University of Chicago in 1949, then moved to Berkeley in 1960. He became an American citizen in 1961.

Dr. Chern retired in 1979, but two years later returned to full-time work when he founded Berkeley's Mathematical Sciences Research Institute with Dr. Moore and Dr. Isadore Singer, now at M.I.T. Dr. Chern was the director of the institute, which offers postdoctoral research positions, from 1981 to 1984.

"He took great pleasure in getting know and working with and helping to guide young mathematicians," Dr. Griffiths said. "I was one of them."

Dr. Chern received a United States National Medal of Science in 1975 and the Wolf Prize, one of the most prestigious honors in mathematics, in 1983. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences.

In 1995, Robert G. Uomini, who had taken Dr. Chern's class on differential geometry as an undergraduate, won $22 million in a lottery and donated part of his winnings to establish a chair for his former professor.

Four years ago, after his wife of 61 years, Shih-ning Chern, died, Dr. Chern returned to China. He helped bring the International Congress of Mathematicians, a major conference, to Beijing in 2002.

Dr. Griffiths recalled a meeting that he and Dr. Chern attended with Jiang Zemin, then China's president, to persuade him to attend the congress's opening ceremony.

"It was clear Jiang Zemin revered this man," Dr. Griffiths said.

Dr. Chern is survived by a son, Paul, of Needham, Mass., and a daughter, May Chu, of Houston.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company

A quote from the December 9, 2004, issue of the San Francisco Chronicle:

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
December 9, 2004

Obituary: Shiing-Shen Chern -- famed mathematician

- Carrie Sturrock, Chronicle Staff Writer

Shiing-Shen Chern, the famed UC Berkeley mathematician whose name is immortalized in the "Chern classes" of differential geometry, died Friday in Tianjian, China. He was 93.

Professor Chern was perhaps the United States' most renowned geometer of his generation. He came to UC Berkeley in 1960, touching off the mathematics department's meteoric rise in prestige, before retiring in 1979. In February, a mathematics chair was endowed in his name.

"He was a towering figure in 20th century mathematics," said UC Berkeley mathematics Professor Calvin Moore. "He reshaped differential geometry and introduced several fundamental tools."

He was a great mathematician partly because of the quality of his research as well as his ability to convey it to other people, UC Berkeley mathematics Professor Robin Hartshorne said. Professor Chern turned the once- dormant field of differential geometry, which deals with the mathematical description of geometric figures, into a lively field of study. He had the greatest impact on global differential geometry and complex algebraic geometry, which are fundamental to many areas of mathematics and theoretical physics.

A Chern class is a numerical invariant attached to complex manifolds -- an object of study in differential geometry.

"The work he did is at the very foundation of one of the most important developments of modern theoretical physics -- gauge theory,'' said friend and colleague Hung-His Wu, professor of mathematics at UC Berkeley. "Anyone who wants to discuss differential geometry in the 20th century will have to mention two or three names, and Chern is one of them.''

He was the recipient of the 1983-1984 Wolf Prize in mathematics, the equivalent of the Nobel Prize. He also received the U.S. National Medal of Science in 1975 and was elected in 1961 to the National Academy of Sciences.

He also had diverse interests. He wrote poetry and was dedicated to his wife of 61 years, Shih-ning (Cheng) Chern, who died four years ago.

In a professional world populated with introverts, Professor Chern was kind and open, holding parties at his home for colleagues.

"He is somebody that had a broad outlook toward people," said Hartshorne. "It's not a warm department, and he was a warm person."

Born in 1911 in Kashing, Chekaing province, China, at the time of the fall of China's last imperial dynasty, the Qing, Professor Chern began his undergraduate studies at age 15 at Nankai University, later attending graduate school at Qinghua University in Beijing. He also studied at the University of Hamburg, where he received his doctorate in 1936, before spending a year at the Sorbonne in Paris.

He returned to teach in China, but the second Sino-Japanese war limited his contact with mathematicians outside the country, and Professor Chern left for Princeton University. He later taught at the University of Chicago and eventually became a naturalized U.S. citizen.

After retiring from UC Berkeley, he co-founded the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute there and served as its first director from 1981 to 1984. In China, he was instrumental in starting the Nankai Institute for Mathematics in Tianjian.

Professor Chern died of heart failure on the Nankai University campus. He is survived by his son, Paul Chern of Needham, Mass., and his daughter May Chu of Houston.

A memorial service is set for Sunday at Nankai University. UC Berkeley will hold a memorial service at a future date.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

©2004 San Francisco Chronicle


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