Kyoji Saito – Wikipedia

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Japanese mathematician

Kyōji Saitō (齋藤 恭司, Saitō Kyōji; born 25 December 1944)[1] is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in algebraic geometry and complex analytic geometry.

Education and career[edit]

Saito received in 1971 his promotion Ph.D. from the University of Göttingen under Egbert Brieskorn, with thesis Quasihomogene isolierte Singularitäten von Hyperflächen (Quasihomogeneous isolated singularities of hypersurfaces).[2] Saito is a professor at the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences (RIMS) of Kyoto University.

Saito’s research deals with the interplay among Lie algebras, reflection groups (Coxeter groups),[3]braid groups, and singularities of hypersurfaces.

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From the 1980s, he did research on underlying symmetries of period integrals in complex hypersurfaces. Saito introduced higher-dimensional generalizations of elliptic integrals. These generalizations are integrals of “primitive forms”,[4] first considered in the study of the unfolding of isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces, associated with infinite-dimensional Lie algebras. He also studied the corresponding new automorphic forms.[5] The theory has a geometric connection to “flat structures” (now called “Saito Frobenius manifolds”),[6]mirror symmetry, Frobenius manifolds, and Gromov–Witten theory in algebraic geometry and various topics in mathematical physics related to string theory.

Saito supervised the thesis of 7 Ph.D. students at Kyoto University, including Hiroaki Terao and Masahiko Yoshinaga.[2]

He was an Invited Speaker with talk The limit element in the configuration algebra for a discrete group: a précis at the International Congress of Mathematicians 1990 in Kyoto. In 2011 he was awarded the Geometry Prize of the Mathematical Society of Japan.

Selected publications[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]


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