Francis Thomas Farrell (born November 14, 1941, in Ohio, United States) is an American mathematician who has made contributions in the area of topology and differential geometry. Farrell is a distinguished professor emeritus of mathematics at Binghamton University.[1] He also holds a position at the Yau Mathematical Sciences Center, Tsinghua University.
Biographical data
Farrell got his bachelor's degree in 1963 from the University of Notre Dame and earned his Ph.D in Mathematics from Yale University in 1967. His Ph.D. advisor was Wu-Chung Hsiang, and his doctoral thesis title was "The Obstruction to Fibering a Manifold over a Circle".[2] He was a NSF Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of California at Berkeley from 1968 to 1969, and became an assistant professor there from 1969 to 1972. He then went to Pennsylvania State University, where he was promoted to professor in 1978. Later he joined the University of Michigan (1979–1985) and Columbia University (1984–1992). Since 1990 Farrell has been a faculty member at SUNY Binghamton.
In 1970, Farrell was invited to give a 50-minute address at the International Congress of Mathematicians about his thesis in Nice, France.[3][4]
In 1990, for their joint work on Rigidity in Geometry and Topology, his co-author Lowell E. Jones was invited to give a 45-minute address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyoto, Japan.[3][5]
In 1993, he and his co-author Lowell E. Jones introduced the Farrell–Jones conjecture[10] and made contributions on it. The conjecture plays an important role in manifold topology.
^F. Thomas Farrell; Lowell E. Jones (1993), "Topological rigidity for compact nonpositively curved manifolds", Differential Geometry: Riemannian Geometry (Los Angeles, CA, 1990), Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., 54: 229–274.