Awards & Winners

Mitsuhiro Shishikura

Mitsuhiro Shishikura is a Japanese mathematician working in the field of complex dynamics. He is professor at Kyoto University in Japan. Shishikura became internationally recognized for two of his earliest contributions, both of which solved long-standing open problems. In his Master's thesis, he proved a conjectured of Fatou from 1920 by showing that a rational function of degree has at most nonrepelling periodic cycles. He proved that the boundary of the Mandelbrot set has Hausdorff dimension two, confirming a conjecture stated by Mandelbrot and Milnor. For his results, he was awarded the Salem Prize in 1992, and the Iyanaga Spring Prize of the Mathematical Society of Japan in 1995. More recent results of Shishikura include the existence of a transcendental entire function with a doubly connected wandering domain, answering a question of Baker from 1985; a study of near-parabolic renormalization which is essential in Buff and Chéritat's recent proof of the existence of polynomial Julia sets of positive planar Lebesgue measure. One of the main tools pioneered by Shishikura and used throughout his work is that of quasiconformal surgery.

Awards by Mitsuhiro Shishikura

Check all the awards nominated and won by Mitsuhiro Shishikura.

1992


Salem Prize
(For showing that a rational function of degree d\\, has at most 2d-2\\, nonrepelling periodic cycles and for proving that the boundary of the Mandelbrot set has Hausdorff dimension two.)