Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
David Ginzburg
Israeli mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
David Ginzburg (Hebrew: דוד גינזבורג) is a professor of mathematics at Tel Aviv University working in number theory and automorphic forms.
Remove ads
Career
Ginzburg received his PhD in mathematics from Tel Aviv University in 1988 under the supervision of Stephen Gelbart.[1] He is a professor of mathematics at Tel Aviv University.[2]
Research
Together with Stephen Rallis and David Soudry, Ginzburg wrote a series of papers about automorphic descent culminating in their book "The descent map from automorphic representations of GL(n) to classical groups". Their automorphic descent method constructs an explicit inverse map to the (standard) Langlands functorial lift and has had major applications to the analysis of functoriality.[3] Also, using the "Rallis tower property" from Rallis's 1984 paper on the Howe duality conjecture, they studied global exceptional correspondences and found new examples of functorial lifts.[4]
Remove ads
Selected publications
- Bump, Daniel; Ginzburg, David (1992). "Symmetric Square L-Functions on GL(r)". Annals of Mathematics. 136 (1): 137–205. doi:10.2307/2946548. JSTOR 2946548. MR 1173928.
- Ginzburg, David; Rallis, Stephen; Soudry, David (1997). "A tower of theta correspondences for $G_2$". Duke Mathematical Journal. 88 (3): 537–624. doi:10.1215/S0012-7094-97-08821-9. MR 1455531.
- Ginzburg, David; Rallis, Stephen; Soudry, David (1999). "On Explicit Lifts of Cusp Forms from GL m to Classical Groups". Annals of Mathematics. 150 (3): 807. arXiv:math/9911264. Bibcode:1999math.....11264G. doi:10.2307/121057. JSTOR 121057. MR 1740991. S2CID 14223575.
- David Ginzburg; Stephen Rallis; David Soudry (2011). The Descent Map from Automorphic Representations of GL(n) to Classical Groups. World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-4304-98-6.
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads