Jorge Manuel Sotomayor Tello | |
Birth Date: | 25 March 1942 |
Birth Place: | Lima, distrito de Rímac, Peru |
Death Place: | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Resting Place: | Memorial do Carmo, 285, Caju, Rio de Janeiro |
Other Names: | Soto |
Fields: | Differential equations, Dynamical Systems, Bifurcation Theory, Differential Equations of Classical Geometry |
Workplaces: | Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada Universidade de São Paulo Universidade Federal de Itajubá(Visiting Professor) |
Alma Mater: | Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Perú, Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Thesis Title: | Estabilidade Estrutural de Primeira Ordem e Variedades de Banach |
Thesis1 Url: | and |
Thesis2 Url: | )--> |
Thesis Year: | 1964 |
Doctoral Advisor: | Maurício Peixoto |
Academic Advisors: | José Tola Pasquel |
Known For: | Principal configuration, curvature lines, umbilic points, structural stability of first order, bifurcations of codimension one, two and three. |
Awards: | National Order of Scientific Merit Brazilian Academy of Sciences Guggenheim Foundation |
Spouse: | Marilda Sotomayor[1] |
Jorge Manuel Sotomayor Tello (25 March 1942 – 7 January 2022) was a Peruvian-born Brazilian mathematician who worked on differential equations,[2] bifurcation theory, and differential equations of classical geometry.
He is one of five sons of Alfonso Sotomayor Ibarra, an accountant, and Clara Rosa Tello de Sotomayor. He was married to Marilda Antonia de Oliveira Sotomayor and had two children.
Sotomayor earned his Ph.D. from the IMPA in 1964 under the supervision of Maurício Peixoto at the age of 22.
In the dissertation Estabilidade Estrutural de Primeira Ordem e Variedades de Banach ("First order structural stability and Banach manifolds") he presented a geometric reinterpretation and extension of the fruitful notions and results relating bifurcations and stability that were introduced by A. A. Andronov and E. A. Leontovich.[3] [4]
Sotomayor visited the University of California at Berkeley during 1966–1968.
He was a recipient of Brazil's National Order of Scientific Merit in mathematics.[5] From 1994 until his death in early 2022, he was a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences. He also was a Fellow of John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (1983).
Sotomayor is the author of the textbooks Portuguese: Lições de Equações Diferenciais Ordinárias, IMPA, Projeto Euclides, (1979), Portuguese: Singularidades de Aplicações Diferenciáveis, ELAM (1976) and Portuguese: Curvas Definidas por Equações Diferenciais no Plano, 13<sup>o</sup> Colóquio Brasileiro de Matemática, IMPA, (1981). He also translated essays of Henri Poincaré into Portuguese, which were published in a book under the title Portuguese: Um Poeta, um Matemático e um Físico: Três Ensaios Biográficos por Henri Poincaré, EDUSP,(2008).
He is also author of the books English: Lines of Curvature and Umbilical Points on Surfaces, 18<sup>o</sup> CBM, Publicações Matemáticas, IMPA,(1991) with Carlos Gutierrez, reprinted and updated as StructurallyConfigurations of Lines of Curvature and Umbilic Points on Surfaces,Lima, Monografias del IMCA, (1998) and English: Differential Equations of Classical Differential Geometry, a Qualitative Theory, 27<sup>o</sup> CBM, Publicações Matemáticas, IMPA, (2009) with Ronaldo Garcia.
Introduced, with Carlos Gutierrez, the concept of "principal configuration" of curvature lines on surfaces. See Structurally Stable Configurations of Lines of Principal Curvature", Astérisque, França, v. 98–99, p. 195–215, (1982). The ideas leading to his work in this subject—traced back to the classical work of G. Monge, C. Dupin and G. Darboux—are discussed in his essay Monge's Ellipsoid. This research has been elaborared and extended in several directions by Sotomayor and his collaborators to include a large class of the differential equations of classical geometry (for example, the asymptotic lines, the axial curvature lines, the lines of mean curvature) and other classes of manifolds (for example, algebraic surfaces in 3 and 4 four dimensional Euclidean spaces).
He died on 7 January 2022, at the age of 79.[6] [7] [8] [9]