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  1. Robin Thomas (August 22, 1962 – March 26, 2020) was a mathematician working in graph theory at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Thomas received his doctorate in 1985 from Charles University in Prague, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic), under the supervision of Jaroslav Nešetřil. [3]

  2. thomas.math.gatech.edu · indexRobin Thomas

    Robin Thomas. Deceased Regents' Professor School of Mathematics Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, Georgia 30332 Contact the steward of Robin's professional legacy: robintho@gmail.com. Mathematical Interests: Graph theory (including infinite graphs), Combinatorics, Combinatorial Optimization, Algorithms. Recent research:

  3. Thomas, a renowned mathematician and Regents' Professor in the School of Mathematics at Georgia Tech, died on March 26, 2020, following a long struggle against Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS).

    • Noga Alon
    • R. Gary Parker
    • George Nemhauser
    • Chun-Hung Liu
    • Prasad Tetali
    • Matt Baker, on His Blog
    • Lance Fortnow, on His Blog

    Robin and I first met in 1989 in Bellcore, and right from the beginning I admired his mathematical talent and remarkable personality. We have written three joint papers, the first one appeared in 1990. Robin has been an outstanding researcher and a superb speaker and mentor. Amazingly he maintained his activity until recently; I had email communica...

    Robin Thomas was a "lifer" in the ACO Program. He was on the original Program Coordinating Committee, and he served as the dissertation advisor of the Program's first graduate, Dan Sanders (1993). When he stepped up and took over the leadership position after Richard Duke retired, he was no caretaker; rather, he shepherded the Program skillfully, p...

    Robin was a brilliant mathematician, a great leader of the ACO program and a wonderful colleague and mentor to students. His absence is a great loss.

    Robin is definitely one of the people who changed my life. I had received his enormous support since I entered Georgia Tech. It continuously benefits me even today. Robin offered me constant encouragement not only verbally but also through his action. I am very grateful that he attended my hooding ceremony even though he had become very difficult f...

    Robin was a remarkable human being, full of resolve and resilience. He was invaluable and inspiring as a colleague and this loss will be felt for a long time to come. He was greatly influential in shaping the ACO PhD program - upholding its rigor through his research, teaching, mentoring and service -- making it internationally renowned and success...

    My previous post was about the mathematician John Conway, who died recently from COVID-19. This post is a tribute to my Georgia Tech School of Mathematics colleague Robin Thomas, who passed away on March 26th at the age of 57 following a long struggle with ALS. Robin was a good friend, an invaluable member of the Georgia Tech community, and a celeb...

    Graph Theorist and Georgia Tech Math Professor Robin Thomas passed away Thursday after his long battle with ALS. He was one of the giants of the field and a rare double winner of the Fulkerson Prize, for the six-color case of the Hadwiger Conjecture and the proof of the strong perfect graph theorem. If you start with a graph G and either delete som...

  4. Aug 30, 2020 · The Editorial Board of Graphs and Combinatorics was deeply saddened to learn of the decease on March 26, 2020 of Robin Thomas, one of the greatest mathematicians of his generation. He was 57 years old.

  5. Robin Thomas, a renowned mathematician, passed away on March 26, 2020, following a long struggle against Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). He was born in Czechoslovakia in 1962 and earned his doctoral degree in 1985 from Charles University.

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  7. Robin Thomas (August 22, 1962 – March 26, 2020) was a mathematician working in graph theory at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Quick Facts Born, Died ... Close. Thomas received his doctorate in 1985 from Charles University in Prague, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic), under the supervision of Jaroslav Nešetřil. [3] .

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