Researchus Advisosaurus



John Hamal Hubbard

431 Malott Hall
Department of Mathematics
Cornell University
Ithaca NY 14853

phone: (607) 255-6495

email: jhh8 at cornell.edu



Research:

Differential equations are the main way in which mathematical models of real systems are constructed, and understanding their behavior is the main contribution a mathematician can make to applications. I am interested in understanding the behavior of differential equations and their close relatives: iterative systems. In particular, I try to see how such systems behave in the complex domain, largely because complex analysis brings new and powerful techniques to bear on the problems.

The availability of powerful computers and computer graphics has changed the way this sort of research is done. In the course of investigations of even such simple iterative systems as quadratic polynomials, amazing pictures show up, rather as artifacts to be investigated than as man-made objects. I anticipate that this sort of experimental mathematics will become a major trend.

Most of my research over the last five years has been devoted to dynamics in several complex variables. I have co-authored four foundational papers in the field. I am also writing three books on a very advanced level, one giving a treatment of Teichmüller space and its applications in theorems of Bill Thurston, the second on dynamics of one complex variable, and the third on differential equations.


Books:


Vector Calculus, Linear Algebra, and Differential Forms, A Unified Approach (with Barbara Burke Hubbard).



Teichmüller Theory and Applications to Geometry, Topology, and Dynamics, Volume I: Teichmüller theory



Calcul Scientifique de la théorie à la pratique, Volume I: Equations algébriques, traitement du signal et géométrie effective (with Florence Hubert).



Calcul Scientifique de la théorie à la pratique, Volume II: Equations différentielles et équations aux dérivées partielles (with Florence Hubert).



Differential Equations: A dynamical systems approach (with Beverly West).



Selected Papers:

A proof of Thurston's topological characterization of rational functions (with Adrien Douady).

A compactification of Hénon mappings in $\C^2$ as dynamical systems (with Peter Papadopol and Vladimir Veselov).

Hénon mappings in the complex domain I: the global topology of dynamical space (with Ralph Oberste-Vorth)

Hénon mappings in the complex domain II: projective and inductive limits of polynomials (with Ralph Oberste-Vorth)

The forced Damped Pendulum: Chaos, Complication and Control

Ratner's Theorem on Horocyclic Flows (with Robyn Miller)

Kolmogorov's theorem on invariant tori (with Yulij Ilyashenko)

Local Connectivity of Julia sets and bifurcation loci: three theorems of J-C Yoccoz

Quadratic Differentials and Measured Foliations (with Howard Masur)

Superattractive Fixed Points in $\C^n$ (with Peter Papadopol)


Selected Talks:

Henon maps talk from March 2008, Milwaukee conference

Marden Lecture, Forced Damped Pendulum, March 2008

In memory of Adrien Douady, Paris, May 2008

The Bott-Duffin synthesis: in memory of Raoul Bott, Montreal, June 2008


Links:

Cornell math department

Centre de Mathématiques et Informatique

Oliver Club

Dynamics seminar

Dynamics page at Cornell

Matrix Editions