Richard Swan


Richard Gordon Swan is an American mathematician who is known for the Serre–Swan theorem relating the geometric notion of vector bundles to the algebraic concept of projective modules, and for the Swan representation, an l-adic projective representation of a Galois group. His work has mainly been in the area of algebraic K-theory.

Education and career

As an undergraduate at Princeton University, Swan was in 1952 one of five winners in the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. He earned his Ph.D. in 1957 from Princeton University under the supervision of John Coleman Moore. In 1969 he proved in full generality what is now known as the Stallings-Swan theorem. He is the Louis Block Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at the University of Chicago. His doctoral students at Chicago include Charles Weibel, also known for his work in K-theory.

Books