Chuu-Lian Terng


Chuu-Lian Terng is a Taiwanese-American mathematician. She received her B.S. from National Taiwan University in 1971 and her Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 1976 under the supervision of Richard Palais, whom she later married. She is currently a professor at University of California at Irvine.
She was a professor at Northeastern University for many years. Before joining Northeastern, she spent two years at the University of California, Berkeley and four years at Princeton University. She also spent two years at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and two years at the Max-Planck Institute in Bonn, Germany.
In 1999, her Association for Women in Mathematics Falconer lecture citation reads:
Her early research concerned the classification of natural vector bundles and natural differential operators between them. She then became interested in submanifold geometry. Her main contributions are developing a structure theory for isoparametric submanifolds in Rn and constructing soliton equations from special submanifolds. Recently, Terng and Karen Uhlenbeck have developed a general approach to integrable PDEs that explains their hidden symmetries in terms of loop group actions. She is co-author of the book Submanifold Geometry and Critical Point Theory and an editor of the Journal of Differential Geometry survey volume 4 on "Integrable systems".
Professor Terng served as President of the Association for Women in Mathematics from 1995 to 1997 and as Member-at-Large of the Council of the American Mathematical Society from 1989 to 1992. She is currently on the Advisory Board of the National Center for Theoretical Sciences in Taiwan, the Steering Committee of the Institute for Advanced Study Park City Summer Institute, and the Editorial Board of the Transactions of the AMS.

Honors

With
Sun-Yung Alice Chang, Fan Chung, Winnie Li, Jang-Mei Wu, and Mei-Chi Shaw,
Terng is one of a group of six women mathematicians from National Taiwan University called by Shiing-Shen Chern "a miracle in Chinese history; the glory of the Chinese people".