Samuel James Patterson


Samuel James Patterson is a Northern Irish mathematician specializing in analytic number theory. He has been a professor at the University of Göttingen since 1981.

Biography

Patterson was born in Belfast and grew up in the east of the city, attending Grosvenor High School. He went to Clare College, Cambridge, in 1967, and received his BA in mathematics in 1970, and his Ph.D. on "The limit set of a Fuchsian group" under Alan Beardon. He spent 1974–1975 at Göttingen, 1975–1979 he was back at Cambridge, and 1979–1981 he was at Harvard as Benjamin Pierce Lecturer. From 1981 to his retirement in 2011 he was professor of mathematics at Göttingen.
He wrote the book An Introduction to the Riemann Zeta Function.
Subjects that Patterson deals with include discontinuous groups, different zeta functions, metaplectic groups, generalized theta functions, and exponential sums in analytical number theory. He is also interested in the history of mathematics. For example, together with Ralf Meyer, he contributed an updated introduction to a new edition of a classic textbook by Hermann Weyl.
In 1978, together with Roger Heath-Brown, he disproved the Kummer conjecture on cubic Gauss sums.
His 17 PhD students include and Bernd Otto Stratmann.
He is the brother of the Northern Irish taxonomist David Joseph Patterson.

Honors and awards

In 1984 Patterson received the Whitehead Prize of the London Mathematical Society. He is on the Executive Committee of the Leibniz Archives based in Hannover and a member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences. From 1982 to 1994 he was an editor of Crelle's Journal.
To mark his 60th birthday friends and colleagues in Göttingen organized a three day conference to celebrate his life in July, 2009. Speakers at this gathering included Daniel Bump, Dorian Goldfeld,
David Kazhdan, and Andrew Ranicki A commemorative volume, Contributions in Analytic and Algebraic Number Theory, edited by Valentin Blomer & Preda Mihăilescu, collecting articles related to or developed at the conference, was issued as a Festschrift for him.

Papers