Tatyana Shaposhnikova

Tatyana Shaposhnikova
Residence Sweden
Fields Function spaces, history of mathematics, partial differential equations
Institutions
Alma mater Leningrad University
Doctoral advisor Solomon G. Mikhlin
Known for Function spaces, partial differential equations
Notable awards
Spouse Vladimir G. Maz'ya
Website
Tatyana Shaposhnikova's academic web site

Tatyana Olegovna Shaposhnikova (Russian: Татьяна Олеговна Шапошникова) is a Russian mathematician, working at the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden. She is best known for her work in the theory of multipliers in function spaces, partial differential operators and history of mathematics, some of which was partly done jointly with Vladimir Maz'ya. She is also a translator of both scientific and literary texts.

Biography

Academic career

T.O. Shaposhnikova graduated from Leningrad University in 1969.[1] From 1969 to 1972 she was a graduate student at the same university. In 1973 she was awarded the Kandidat Nauk degree. From 1973 to 1990 she worked in the mathematics departments of a number of technical institutes in Leningrad, first as an assistant and then as an associate professor. She lost her job twice because of her contacts with active dissidents,[2] thus having to change her employer. She immigrated in Sweden in 1990 with her family.[3] She has worked as associate professor (universitetslektor) at the Department of Mathematics of the University of Linköping from 1 July 1991 to September 2013, and held a position of full professor at the Department of Mathematics of the Ohio State University, from 2004 to 2008: from October 2013 she holds a part-time job at the Department of Mathematics at the Royal Institute of Technology.

Currently she serves as a member of the European Mathematical Society Ethics Committee[4] and as a member of the editorial boards of the journal Complex variable and Elliptic Equations and of the Eurasian Mathematical Journal.

Honors

On March 2003 Prof. Shaposhnikova and Vladimir Maz'ya were awarded the Verdaguer Prize by the French Academy of Sciences[5] for their work resulting in the first scientific biography of Jacques Hadamard.[6] On May 2010 she was awarded the Thureus prize by the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala "for her outstanding contribution to the theory of partial differential equations and in particular to the theory of multipliers in function spaces".[7]

Work

Research activity

Prof. T. O. Shaposhnikova is the author of more than 70 research papers and of four books:[8] her research mainly belongs to the following fields.

Function spaces

From 1979 on,[9] the theory of multipliers in various spaces of differentiable functions has been the main research theme of her work.[10] She found conditions for the boundedness of singular integrals and pseudodifferential operators acting between pairs of Sobolev spaces in 1995.[11] In 1989 she showed that multipliers in Bessel potential spaces are traces of multipliers belonging to a certain class of differentiable functions with a weighted mixed norm.[12] A large part of her joint work with Vladimir Maz'ya on the theory of multipliers involves their analytic characterization, trace inequalities and relations between traces and extension of multipliers, relations of Sobolev multipliers and other function spaces, maximal subalgebras of multiplier spaces, estimates of their essential norm and compactness of multipliers.[13]

Linear and non-linear PDEs

Based on her researches on the theory of multipliers, T. Shaposhnikova gave various applications of this theory to the study of solutions to second order linear and quasilinear elliptic partial differential equations and systems of such equations: this was a consequence of the fact that, in several cases, such solutions can be considered as multipliers in certain spaces of differentiable functions on a given domain (1986, 1987).[14] She described the structure of composition operators in spaces of multipliers between Sobolev spaces and gave applications of those results to semilinear elliptic systems of equations (1987).[15] She also showed that multipliers can be naturally suited to deal with the Lp coercivity of the Neumann problem (1989).[16] Various other applications of multipliers, for example to the problem of higher regularity in single and double layer potential theory for Lipschitz domains,[17] to the problem of regularity at the boundary in the Lp-theory of elliptic boundary value problems and to singular integral operators in Sobolev spaces are summarized in the book (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 2009).[18]

History of mathematics

Her prize winning book on Jacques Hadamard, coauthored with V. Maz'ya,[6] was published in 1998 jointly by the American Mathematical Society and the London Mathematical Society. An earlier work on the same subject was written by her jointly with E. Polishchuk (1990).[19] Her recent activity in this field includes the paper (Shaposhnikova 2005) telling three stories of scientists who were forced to answer a mathematical question under rather trying circumstances.[20]

Translation and editing activity

T.O. Shaposhnikova has translated and edited several mathematical monographs: it is worth to note the works by Koshelev et al. (1975) and by Mikhlin (1979), the book on Sobolev spaces by Maz'ya (1985),[21] and the books by Kresin & Maz'ya (2007) and by Maz'ya & Soloviev (2010). However, her work is not restricted only to the translation of monographs: for example she translated into Russian a play by Lars Gårding, titled "Mathematics, Life and Death",[22] published the mathematical journal Algebra i Analiz (Алгебра и анализ).

Prof. Shaposhnikova began translating fiction while still living in Russia. In the 1970s she translated into Russian "The Voyage of the Dawn Treader",[23] "The Silver Chair"[24] and the "Screwtape Letters"[25] by C. S. Lewis. These translations were impossible to publish due to ideological reasons and were distributed as samizdat:[8] they first appeared as proper publications only in the mid-1990s, with new reprints appearing regularly.[26]

In 2005 she began translating Swedish children's books into Russian.[8] Among them are "Kerstin and I" by Astrid Lindgren,[27] "Mechanical Santa Claus" by Sven Nordqvist[28] and two books of the "Loranga" series by Barbro Lindgren.[29]

Selected publications

See also

Notes

  1. The basic information on T. Shaposhnikova's academic career are taken from her CV, available from her home page (Shaposhnikova 2015) at the Department of Mathematics of the University of Linköping, and from her speech (Shaposhnikova 2010, pp. 65–72).
  2. As remembered by T. Shaposhnikova (2010,p. 65) herself, while describing her work in the Samizdat movement: see also the "Translation and editing activity" section of the present entry.
  3. Regarding that period of her life, see also the entry on her spouse Vladimir Maz'ya.
  4. See the committee home page at the European Mathematical Society (2011).
  5. See the short announcements published by the French Academy of Sciences (2009).
  6. 1 2 Precisely, their work was published as the book (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 1998): revised and extended translations in French and Russian languages appeared respectively in 2005 and 2008
  7. The motivation for awarding of the Thureus prize is precisely the following one:-"för hennes framstående insatser rörande partiella differentialekvationer, speciellt teorin för multiplikatorer på funktionsrum". See reference (Sundelöf 2010, p. 40).
  8. 1 2 3 See (Shaposhnikova 2010, p. 65).
  9. See, for example, (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 1979).
  10. See the motivation for the awarding of the Thureus prize given by Sundelöf (2010, p. 40) and reported in the "Honors" section.
  11. See (Shaposhnikova 1995).
  12. See references (Shaposhnikova 1989) and (Shaposhnikova 1989a).
  13. The research of T. Shaposhnikova as well as her joint research with V. Maz'ya is exposed in the two books (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 1985) and (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 2009).
  14. See references (Shaposhnikova 1986), (Shaposhnikova 1987) and the short communications (Shaposhnikova 1986a) and (Shaposhnikova 1987b).
  15. See (Shaposhnikova 1987a).
  16. See reference (Shaposhnikova 1989b) and also the short communication (Shaposhnikova 1988).
  17. This theory is commonly referred as "Layer potential theory".
  18. See also their older work (Maz'ya & Shaposhnikova 1985).
  19. See (Polishchuk & Shaposhnikova 1990).
  20. The three scientists the paper tells a story about are Jacob Tamarkin, Igor Tamm and Gaetano Fichera.
  21. This book is also dedicated to her by her husband: see (Maz'ya 1985, p. V).
  22. The whole play consists of the three papers (Gårding 2000), (Gårding 2001) and (Gårding 2009).
  23. See (Lewis 1991).
  24. See (Lewis 1991a).
  25. See (Lewis 1991b).
  26. See (Shaposhnikova 2010, p. 65): for example, the book (Lewis 1991b) was translated into Russian in 1975 but was published only in 1991.
  27. See (Lindgren 2008).
  28. See (Nordqvist 2009).
  29. See (Lindgren 2009).

References

Biographical references

References pertaining to her work

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