Kenneth S. Brown
Professor of Mathematics

 

Web Site

www.math.cornell.edu/~kbrown/

Contact Information

Office:  521 Malott Hall
Phone:  (607) 255-3598
Fax:  (607) 255-7149
Email:  kbrown@cornell.edu

Courses & Office Hours

Education

Ph.D. (1971) Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Research Area: Algebra, topology, group theory

My main interests have been algebra and topology. I have especially enjoyed using topological methods to study infinite discrete groups. In some of my early work, for instance, I studied Euler characteristics of groups. I obtained formulas relating the Euler characteristic (a topological concept) to purely algebraic properties of groups. When applied in special cases, these formulas unexpectedly led to new results in algebraic number theory. Later, I found topological methods for studying two interesting families of groups: infinite simple groups, and groups that can be presented by means of a complete rewriting system.

My work has recently had unexpected applications to probability theory. I have used methods of algebra and topology to analyze an interesting family of random walks.

Selected Publications

Euler Characteristics of Discrete Groups and G-Spaces, Invent. Math. 27 (1974), 229–264.

Cohomology of Groups, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1982 (Graduate texts in mathematics 87).

Buildings, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989.

Semigroups, Rings and Markov Chains, J. Theoret. Probab. 13 (2000), 871–938.

Forest diagrams for elements of Thompson’s group F (with James Belk), Internat. J. Algebra Comput. 15 (2005), 815–850.


Last modified: October 31, 2006