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  1. Richard Schoen. University of Dayton ( BSc.) Richard Melvin Schoen (born October 23, 1950) is an American mathematician known for his work in differential geometry and geometric analysis. He is best known for the resolution of the Yamabe problem in 1984.

  2. Arnold Schoen (son of Jacob Schoen and Elizabeth Knapke, born on 18 March 1904 in Mount Sterling, Ohio) was a farmer in Allen, Darke County, Ohio. On 8 November 1933 he married Rosemary Heitkamp (known as Rose). Rose Heitkamp, a daughter of Bernard John Heitkamp and Catherine Gehle, was born on 8 November 1911 in Saint Henry, Mercer County ...

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  4. For more than forty years Richard Schoen has been a leading figure in geometric analysis, connecting ideas betweenanalysis,geometry,topology,andphysicsinfas-cinating and unexpected ways. In 2017 Richard Schoen was awarded the Wolf Prize for these fundamental contributions and for his “understanding of the in-

  5. He has supervised around forty students and counting and has hosted many postdocs. Even with his great success, Schoen is still one of the hardest working people in mathematics, giving us all the distinct impression that he must love it. His impact on mathematics, both in terms of his ideas and the example he sets, continues to be tremendous.

  6. Minimal surfaces and eigenvalue problems Contemporaty Mathematics Schoen, R. M., Fraser, A. 2013; 599: 105-122 Specifying Angular Momentum and Center of Mass for Vacuum Initial Data Sets COMMUNICATIONS IN MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS Huang, L., Schoen, R., Wang, M. 2011 ; 306 (3) : 785-803

  7. Jan 5, 2017 · Winners will be feted at a state ceremony in June at the Israeli Knesset. The prize, which comes with $100,000, has been bestowed annually since 1978 to exceptional figures in agriculture, chemistry, mathematics, medicine and physics. “I’m delighted to be chosen to receive the 2017 Wolf Prize,” Schoen said.

  8. In 1989 Dr. Schoen was awarded the Bôcher Prize by the American Mathematical Society for his resolution of the well-known Yamabe problem. In 2017 he was awarded the Wolf Prize, the Hopf Prize, the Rolf Schock Prize, and the Lobachevsky Medal. Dr. Schoen is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences.

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