Micha Sharir | |
---|---|
Born |
Tel Aviv, Israel |
8 June 1950
Nationality | Israeli |
Fields |
Computer Science Mathematics |
Alma mater | Tel Aviv University |
Thesis | Extreme Operators Between Banach Spaces (1976) |
Doctoral advisor | Aldo Lazar |
Doctoral students |
Pankaj K. Agarwal Boris Aronov Klara Kedem |
Known for |
Computational geometry Combinatorial geometry |
Notable awards | EMET Prize (2007) |
Micha Sharir (Hebrew: מיכה שריר; born 8 June 1950 in Tel Aviv, Israel) is an Israeli mathematician and computer scientist. He is a professor at Tel Aviv University, notable for his contributions to computational geometry and combinatorial geometry, having authored hundreds of papers.
Sharir was born in Tel Aviv in 1950. As a high school student he won the first place in the youth mathematics olympics of the Weizmann Institute of Science and Grossman Award from the Technion. In 1970 he completed his undergraduate studies and then served in unit 8200 of the Israel Defense Forces, during his service he was involved in a research team which won the 1975 Israel Defense Prize. In 1976 Sharir completed his doctoral studies in Pure Mathematics under the supervision of Aldo Lazar in Tel Aviv University. Then he started his postdoctoral studies at the Courant Institute of New York University, where he worked with Jack Schwartz.
In 1980 he joined the faculty of Tel Aviv University, where he now holds the Isaias Nizri Chair in Computational Geometry and Robotics. He is also a visiting research professor at the Courant Institute, where he has been the deputy head of the Robotics Lab (1985–89). He has served as the head of the computer science department (twice) and as the head of the school of mathematics (1997–99) at Tel Aviv University. He is one of the co-founders of the Minerva Center for Geometry at Tel Aviv University.