Aldridge Bousfield facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Pete (Aldridge) Bousfield
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Born | Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
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April 5, 1941
Died | October 4, 2020 | (aged 79)
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | M.I.T. |
Known for | Bousfield localization |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics, Algebraic Topology |
Institutions | Brandeis University, University of Chicago |
Thesis | Higher Order Suspension Maps for Non-Additive Functors (1966) |
Doctoral advisor | Daniel Kan |
Aldridge Knight Bousfield (April 5, 1941 – October 4, 2020), known as "Pete", was an American mathematician working in algebraic topology, known for the concept of Bousfield localization.
Work and life
Bousfield obtained both his undergraduate degree (1963) and his doctorate (1966) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His doctoral thesis, entitled "Higher Order Suspension Maps for Non-Additive Functors", was written under the supervision of Daniel Kan. He was a lecturer and assistant professor at Brandeis University and moved to the University of Illinois at Chicago where he worked from 1972 to his retirement in 2000.
Bousfield married Marie Vastersavendts, a Belgian mathematician, in 1968. She worked as demographer for the city of Chicago and died in 2016.
Research
Within algebraic topology, he specialised in homotopy theory. The Bousfield-Kan spectral sequence, Bousfield localization of spectra and model categories, and the Bousfield-Friedlander model structure are named after Bousfield (and Kan and Friedlander, respectively).
Recognition
He was named to the 2018 class of fellows of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to homotopy theory and for exposition".