John Willard Milnor


Quick Info

Born
20 February 1931
Orange, New Jersey, USA

Summary
John Milnor is an American mathematician known for his work in differential topology, K-theory and dynamical systems.

Biography

John Milnor's parents were Joseph Willard Milnor (1889-1949) and Emily Cox (1891-1973). Joseph Milnor, born in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, graduated from Lehigh University in 1912 with first class honours in mathematics. After serving for a year with the General Electric Company in Pittsfield, he entered the engineering department of the Western Union Telegraph Company in 1913. Nine years later he was promoted to research engineer and, in 1936, became a transmission engineer. He was appointed consulting engineer in 1943 and retired in the following year.

Milnor (known to his friends and colleagues as Jack) was an undergraduate at Princeton University, receiving his A.B. in 1951. Most outstanding mathematicians develop a passion for the subject when at school but not so Milnor. It was in his first year at Princeton that he first became interested in mathematics [14]:-
The first time that I developed a particular interest in mathematics was as a freshman at Princeton University. I had been rather socially maladjusted and did not have too many friends, but when I came to Princeton, I found myself very much at home in the atmosphere of the mathematics common room. People were chatting about mathematics, playing games, and one could come by at any time and just relax. I found the lectures very interesting. I felt more at home there than I ever had before and I have stayed with mathematics ever since.
Among his notable achievements while an undergraduate were being named Putnam Fellow as a top scorer in the Putnam competition in mathematics in 1949 and 1950. Perhaps even more impressive was the publication of his first paper in the Annals of Mathematics in 1950. This paper, On the total curvature of knots, was accepted for publication in 1948 when Milnor was only seventeen years old. The paper came as the result of the differential geometry course Milnor attended given by Albert Tucker. In the lectures Karol Borsuk's question on the total curvature of a knotted curve was mentioned and Milnor solved the problem "after a few days thought". Milnor had been helped in writing the paper by Ralph Fox and he acknowledged this in the paper:-
I am indebted to R H Fox for substantial assistance in the preparation of this paper.
He began research at Princeton after graduating with his B.A. and, in 1953, before completing his doctoral studies, he was appointed to the faculty in Princeton. While undertaking research he enjoyed playing games in the common room. In particular he played Kriegspiel (a game of blindfold chess), Go and Nash (a game invented by John Nash and now called Hex). In fact John Nash was at Princeton during these years and Milnor and Nash often talked about game theory. Milnor's next paper, written while he was undertaking research, was Sums of positional games (1953). Milnor writes in the Introduction:-
Many common games, such as chess and checkers, exhibit a structure in addition to that which is necessary to define their game-theoretic properties. By a position in such a game will be meant merely the physical setup of the board without any specification as to which player is to move. In these games a set of possible moves is defined at each position for each of the players, even though only one of them will actually be able to move from this position in any particular play of the game. In this paper an operation of addition will be defined and studied for games having this structure.
This was only one of several papers that Milnor published in 1953. The others were: The characteristics of a vector field on the two-sphere; On total curvatures of closed space curves; and (with Israel Herstein) An axiomatic approach to measurable utility. Another paper, Link groups, was published in 1954 but it had been submitted for publication in March 1952, over a year before the first of the 1953 papers just mentioned. Milnor writes in the Introduction to Link groups:-
By a link homotopy is meant a deformation of one link onto another, during which each component of the link is allowed to cross itself, but such that no two components are allowed to intersect. The purpose of this paper is to study links under the relation of homotopy. The fundamental tool in this study will be the link group. The link group of a link is a factor group of the fundamental group of its complement, which is invariant under homotopy. ... I am indebted to R H Fox for assistance in the preparation of this paper.
In 1954 Milnor received his doctorate for his 44-page thesis Isotopy of Links written under Ralph Fox's supervision. Milnor remained on the staff at Princeton where he was an Alfred P Sloan fellow from 1955 until 1959. During these years he undertook research on manifolds. He explained in [14] what a manifold is and why it is important:-
In low dimensions manifolds are things that are easily visualized. A curve in space is an example of a one-dimensional manifold; the surfaces of a sphere and of a doughnut are examples of two-dimensional manifolds. But for mathematicians the dimensions one and two are just the beginning; things get more interesting in higher dimensions. Also, for physicists manifolds are very important, and it is essential for them to look at higher-dimensional examples. For example, suppose you study the motion of an airplane. To describe just the position takes three coordinates, but then you want to describe what direction it is going in, the angle of its wings, and so on. It takes three coordinates to describe the point in space where the plane is centred and three more coordinates to describe its orientation, so already you are in a six-dimensional space. As the plane is moving, you have a path in six-dimensional space, and this is only the beginning of the theory. If you study the motion of the particles in a gas, there are enormously many particles bouncing around, and each one has three coordinates describing its position and three coordinates describing its velocity, so a system of a thousand particles will have six thousand coordinates. Of course, much larger numbers occur, so mathematicians and physicists are used to working in large-dimensional spaces.
He was promoted to professor in 1960 then, in 1962, Milnor was appointed to the Henry Putman chair.

Milnor was awarded a Fields Medal at the 1962 International Congress of Mathematicians in Stockholm. His most remarkable achievement, which played a major role in the award of the Fields Medal, was his proof that a 7-dimensional sphere can have several differential structures. This work opened up the new field of differential topology. He showed that 28 different differentiable structures exist on the seven-dimensional sphere. He distinguished between these structures using numerical invariants based on the Todd polynomials. The Todd polynomials were first studied in algebraic geometry and it is surprising that they play this fundamental role in classification of manifolds. The reason that Milnor could use them to distinguish the differential properties of manifolds is because they have arithmetic properties, involving the Bernoulli numbers, which reflect in a deep and not fully understood way these differential properties.

The references [4] to [18] give a good indication of the wide influence of Milnor's work up to 1992 (when these articles were written). The article [4] is a survey of Milnor's work in algebra, particularly in algebraic KK-theory, where his work continues to have important influences. The article [17] looks at nine papers which Milnor had written on differential geometry. It discusses Milnor's theorem, which shows that the total curvature of a knot is at least 4. Among other results discussed are Milnor's result showing that we cannot necessarily "hear the shape" of a 16-dimensional torus, and another result giving upper and lower bounds on the number of distinct words of a given length in a finitely generated subgroup of the fundamental group.

In the 1950s Milnor did a substantial amount of work on algebraic topology which is discussed in [18]. He constructed the classifying space of a topological group and gave a geometric realisation of a semi-simplicial complex. He also studied the Steenrod algebra and its dual, investigated the structure of Hopf algebras, and studied characteristic classes and their relation to mathematical physics.

For a good overview of Milnor's mathematics, see the citations for the various prizes which he has won at THIS LINK.

The extracts from reviews of his books and the extracts from Milnor's Prefaces to these books contain much useful information: see THIS LINK.

Milnor's current interest is dynamics, especially holomorphic dynamics. His work in dynamics is summarised by Peter Makienko in his review of [9]:-
It is evident now that low-dimensional dynamics, to a large extent initiated by Milnor's work, is a fundamental part of general dynamical systems theory. Milnor cast his eye on dynamical systems theory in the mid-1970s. By that time the Smale program in dynamics had been completed. Milnor's approach was to start over from the very beginning, looking at the simplest nontrivial families of maps. The first choice, one-dimensional dynamics, became the subject of his joint paper with Thurston. Even the case of a unimodal map, that is, one with a single critical point, turns out to be extremely rich. This work may be compared with Poincaré's work on circle diffeomorphisms, which 100 years before had inaugurated the qualitative theory of dynamical systems. Milnor's work has opened several new directions in this field, and has given us many basic concepts, challenging problems and nice theorems.
Milnor has received many awards and honours for his extraordinarily important contributions. He received the National Medal of Science in 1967 and was elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Science. He is a member of the American Philosophy Society and has played a major role in the American Mathematical Society. In August 1982 Milnor received the Leroy P Steele Prize:-
...for a paper of fundamental and lasting importance, 'On manifolds homeomorphic to the 7-sphere', Annals of Mathematics 64 (1956), 399-405.
He received the Wolf Prize (1989), the Leroy P Steele Prize for Mathematical Exposition (2004), the Leroy P Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement (2011), the Abel Prize (2011) and in 2014 was made a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.

See extracts from the citations for the various prizes which he has won at THIS LINK.

Milnor has written eight important books: Morse theory (1963); Lectures on the h-cobordism theorem (1965); Topology from the differentiable viewpoint (1965); Singular points of complex hypersurfaces (1968); Introduction to algebraic K-theory (1971); (with Dale Husemoller) Symmetric bilinear forms (1973); (with James D Stasheff) Characteristic classes (1974); and Dynamics in one complex variable (1999).

For extracts from reviews of these books and of the seven volumes of Milnor's papers that have been published, and for Milnor's Prefaces to these books see THIS LINK.

Among the many services he has rendered to mathematics is editorial work, being editor of the Annals of Mathematics from 1962. Since 1988 he has been at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. There were several reasons for moving there, one being Dusa McDuff with whom Milnor had been friends for many years and eventually married. She had been appointed to the University of Warwick in 1976 but resigned her tenured post there two years later and accepted an untenured post at the State University of New York at Stony Brook so that she could be close to Milnor. Dusa McDuff wrote:-
I was influenced by the clarity of Jack Milnor's ideas and approach to mathematics, and was helped by his encouragement. I kept my job in Stony Brook, even though it meant a long commute to Princeton and a weekend relationship, since it was very important to me not to compromise on my job as my mother had done. After several years, I married Jack and had a ... child.
Milnor said [14]:-
I felt that the Institute [for Advanced Study] was a wonderful place to spend some years, but for me it was, perhaps, not a good place to spend my life. I was too isolated, in a way. I think the contact with young people and students and having more continuity was important to me, so I was happy to find a good position in Stony Brook. There were also domestic reasons: my wife was at Stony Brook and commuting back and forth, which worked very well until our son got old enough to talk. Then he started complaining loudly about it.
Finally we note Milnor's hobbies [14]:-
I like to relax by reading science fiction or other silly novels. I certainly used to love mountain climbing, although I was never an expert. I have also enjoyed skiing. Again I was not an expert, but it was something I enjoyed doing. ... I enjoy music but I don't have a refined musical ear or a talent for it.


References (show)

  1. Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/biography/John-Willard-Milnor
  2. M Abate, Exotic spheres and John Milnor, in Imagine math. 2 (Springer, Milan, 2013), 221-229.
  3. E Artal Bartolo, J I Cogolludo Agustín and A Melle Hernández, John Willard Milnor, 1962 Fields Medal (Spanish), Gac. R. Soc. Mat. Esp. 15 (3) (2012), 575-587.
  4. H Bass, John Milnor, the algebraist, in Topological methods in modern mathematics (Houston, TX, 1993), 45-84.
  5. E H Brown, Review: Topology from the differentiable viewpoint, by John Willard Milnor, Amer. Math. Monthly 74 (4) (1967), 461.
  6. J Hubbard, Review: Dynamics in one complex variable, by John Willard Milnor, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.) 38 (4) (2001), 495-498.
  7. S S Khare, On Abel Prize 2011 to John Willard Milnor: a brief description of his significant work, Math. Student 82 (1-4) (2013), 247-279.
  8. N H Kuiper, Review: Morse theory, by John Willard Milnor, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 71 (1) (1965), 136-137.
  9. M Lyubich, Back to the origin : Milnor's program in dynamics, in Topological methods in modern mathematics (Houston, TX, 1993), 85-92.
  10. Milnor receives 2011 Abel prize, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 58 (6) (2011), 831-832.
  11. J Milnor, Growing up in the old Fine Hall, in Prospects in Mathematics (Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 1999), 1-11,
  12. J Milnor, Differential Topology Forty-six Years Later, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 58 (6) (2011), 804-809.
  13. J Porti, Joan John Milnor: 2011 Abel Prize (Catalan), SCM Not. No. 31 (2011), 32-36.
  14. M Raussen and J Milnor, Interview with John Milnor, Notices Amer. Math. Soc. 59 (3) (2012), 400-408..
  15. J Sondow, An aroma of paradox and audacity : Milnor's work in differential topology, in Topological methods in modern mathematics (Houston, TX, 1993), 23-30.
  16. E H Spanier, Review: Characteristic classes, by John Willard Milnor and James D Stasheff, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 81 (5) (1975), 862-866.
  17. M Spivak, A brief report of John Milnor's brief excursions into differential geometry, in Topological methods in modern mathematics (Houston, TX, 1993), 31-43.
  18. J Stasheff, Milnor's work from the perspective of algebraic topology, in Topological methods in modern mathematics (Houston, TX, 1993), 5-22.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update July 2015