Dominique Hulin (born 1959)[1] is a French mathematician specializing in differential geometry and known for her textbook on Riemannian geometry.

Dominique Hulin
NationalityFrench
Academic background
Alma materEcole Normale Supérieure
ThesisPinching and Betti numbers (1983)
Doctoral advisorMarcel Berger
Academic work
DisciplineMathematics
Sub-disciplineDifferential geometry, Riemannian geometry
InstitutionsParis-Saclay University
WebsiteHome page

Hulin studied mathematics at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris from 1978 to 1983,[2] working there with Marcel Berger and completing her doctorate in 1983 with the dissertation Pinching and Betti numbers.[3] She was an assistant professor at Paris Diderot University from 1983 to 1985, when she became maître de conferences at Paris-Sud University, which later became Paris-Saclay University.[2] In 2019 she was advanced to the exceptional class of maîtres de conferences.[4]

She is the coauthor, with Sylvestre Gallot and Jacques Lafontaine, of the textbook Riemannian Geometry (Universitext, Springer, 1987; 3rd ed., 2004).[5]

References edit

  1. ^ Birth year from Library of Congress catalog entry, retrieved 2022-03-16
  2. ^ a b "Dominique Hulin", ORCiD, retrieved 2022-03-16
  3. ^ Dominique Hulin at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ "Rapport sur les sessions du cnu 25 pour l'année 2019" (PDF), La Gazette des Mathématiciens (in French) (163), French Mathematical Society: 60–63, January 2020; see section 4.1, p. 61
  5. ^ Reviews of Riemannian Geometry:

External links edit