Eugenio Calabi


Eugenio Calabi is an Italian-born American mathematician and the Thomas A. Scott Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus, at the University of Pennsylvania, specializing in differential geometry, partial differential equations and their applications.

Academic career

Calabi was a Putnam Fellow as an undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1946. He received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Princeton University in 1950 after completing a doctoral dissertation, titled "Isometric complex analytic imbedding of Kahler manifolds", under the supervision of Salomon Bochner. He later obtained a professorship at the University of Minnesota.
In 1964, Calabi joined the mathematics faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. Following the retirement of the German-born American mathematician Hans Rademacher, he was appointed to the Thomas A. Scott Professorship of Mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania in 1967. He won the Steele Prize from the American Mathematical Society in 1991 for his work in differential geometry. In 1994, Calabi assumed emeritus status. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.

Calabi conjecture

His work on the Calabi conjecture for Kähler metrics led to the development of Calabi–Yau manifolds; these, and the study of constant scalar curvature Kähler metrics and extremal Kähler metrics introduced by him in 1982 are central topics in complex differential geometry.

Major publications