Denis Auroux (born April 1977) is a French mathematician working in geometry and topology.
As a postdoc, he was a C. L. E. Moore Instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1999 to 2002, where he became an assistant professor in 2002, an associate professor in 2004 (tenured in 2006), and a professor in 2009 (on leave from 2009 to 2011). From 2009 to 2018, he was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Since Fall 2018, he has been at Harvard University, where he taught Math 55, two-semester honors undergraduate course on algebra and analysis.
His research deals with symplectic geometry, low-dimensional topology, and mirror symmetry. (with links to articles in pdf format)
In 2002, he received the Peccot Lectures from the Collège de France. In 2005, he received a Sloan Research Fellowship. He was an invited speaker in 2010 with talk Fukaya Categories and bordered Heegaard-Floer Homology at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Hyderabad and in 2004 at the European Congress of Mathematicians in Stockholm. (published in 2005 in Proceedings of the European Congress of Mathematics: Stockholm, June 27–July 2, 2004)
Selected publications
External links
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