Generated by GPT-5-mini| Michiel Hazewinkel | |
|---|---|
| Name | Michiel Hazewinkel |
| Birth date | 1943 |
| Birth place | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
| Nationality | Dutch |
| Fields | Mathematics |
| Institutions | Universiteit van Amsterdam, Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica, European Mathematical Society |
| Alma mater | Universiteit van Amsterdam |
| Doctoral advisor | Jan van de Craats |
Michiel Hazewinkel is a Dutch mathematician noted for contributions to algebra, combinatorics, and the theory of formal groups, with extensive editorial work and authorship in mathematical encyclopedias and handbooks. He held professorships and research positions at major Dutch institutions and played roles in international mathematical organizations and publishing. His career spans research, pedagogy, editorial leadership, and mentorship, influencing areas connected to algebraic topology, number theory, and computational algebra.
Born in Rotterdam, Hazewinkel studied at the Universiteit van Amsterdam where he completed his doctorate under supervision connected to Dutch mathematical traditions. His formative years placed him within the milieu of postwar Dutch mathematics alongside figures associated with the Mathematical Centre (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica), the KNAW, and research circles that included contacts with scholars linked to Leiden University, Utrecht University, and the Eindhoven University of Technology. Early influences encompassed work traced through networks to researchers in Algebraic Topology, Number Theory, and Combinatorics.
Hazewinkel served as a professor at the Universiteit van Amsterdam and held appointments at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (formerly the Mathematisch Centrum). He participated in committees connected to the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and engaged with editorial boards of journals and publishing houses associated with the European Mathematical Society, Springer Science+Business Media, North-Holland, and academic presses. His roles connected him to conferences sponsored by the International Mathematical Union, the American Mathematical Society, and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. He lectured at institutions including University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Harvard University, Princeton University, and research institutes such as the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, and the Clay Mathematics Institute.
Hazewinkel's research addressed Formal Group Laws, Hopf Algebras, Witt Vectors, and structures in Algebraic Geometry, touching on topics relevant to Elliptic Curves, Modular Forms, and K-theory. He authored and edited influential reference works that interact with literature from Bourbaki, Dieudonné, Serre, Grothendieck, Cartan, and Eilenberg–MacLane. His editorial and authorial output includes handbooks that intersect with studies by Hazewinkel collaborators and linked results from Adams, Milnor, Atiyah, Hirzebruch, Weibel, and Connes. He contributed survey articles and entries that systematized knowledge used by researchers citing work by Lazard, Hasse, Witt, Demazure, Borel, and Serre in contexts overlapping with Commutative Algebra, Representation Theory, and Differential Geometry. His bibliographic and encyclopedic labors connected to cataloging results from Zariski, Samuel, Noether, Chern, Rosenlicht, and Zhang-linked literature.
Hazewinkel supervised doctoral students and postdoctoral researchers who subsequently held positions at universities such as Leiden University, Utrecht University, Delft University of Technology, Radboud University Nijmegen, Tilburg University, and international centers including University of California, Berkeley, University of Michigan, ETH Zurich, and University of Tokyo. He collaborated with mathematicians whose networks include Michel Demazure, Jean-Pierre Serre, Pierre Deligne, Daniel Quillen, John Milnor, Friedhelm Waldhausen, and researchers in the orbit of Bourbaki-style seminars. His collaborative publications show connections to authors from Japan, Germany, France, United Kingdom, and United States research groups.
Hazewinkel received recognition from Dutch and international bodies, including honors associated with the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences and awards or invited roles linked to the European Mathematical Society, International Mathematical Union, and national science organizations. He was invited to speak at meetings of the Royal Society, at symposia organized by the London Mathematical Society, and at conferences under the aegis of the American Mathematical Society and the International Congress of Mathematicians structures. His editorial stewardship earned acknowledgments from major publishers such as Springer, North-Holland, and professional societies.
Hazewinkel edited and authored comprehensive reference volumes and handbooks that have been used by researchers citing foundational texts by Bourbaki, Dieudonné, Serre, Grothendieck, Atiyah, and Milnor. His work on formal groups and Hopf algebras is referenced alongside treatises by Lazard, Cartier, Hazewinkel contemporaries, and monographs used in graduate curricula at institutions like Princeton University, Cambridge University, and ETH Zurich. The legacy of his editorial projects persists in bibliographies and encyclopedic collections used in the study of Algebraic Topology, Algebraic Geometry, Number Theory, and Representation Theory, forming part of library holdings at the Royal Library of the Netherlands and major university libraries worldwide.
Category:Dutch mathematicians Category:1943 births Category:Living people