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.
Books:
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
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