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Vitaly Bergelson

Mathematician at Ohio State University From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vitaly Bergelson
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Vitaly Bergelson (born 1950 in Kiev[1]) is a mathematical researcher and professor at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. His research focuses on ergodic theory and combinatorics.

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Bergelson received his Ph.D. in 1984 under Hillel Furstenberg at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.[1] He gave an invited address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2006 in Madrid.[2] Among Bergelson's best known results is a polynomial generalization of Szemerédi's theorem.[3] The latter provided a positive solution to the famous Erdős–Turán conjecture from 1936 stating that any set of integers of positive upper density contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. In a 1996 paper Bergelson and Leibman obtained an analogous statement for "polynomial progressions".[4] The Bergelson-Leibman theorem[1] and the techniques developed in its proof spurred significant further applications and generalizations, particularly in the recent work of Terence Tao.[5][6]

In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[7]

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