Annette Werner

Annette Werner (born 1966)[1] is a German mathematician. Her research interests include diophantine geometry and the algebraic geometry of non-Archimedean ordered fields, including the study of buildings, Berkovich spaces, and tropical geometry. She is a professor of mathematics at Goethe University Frankfurt.[2]

Warner at Oberwolfach, 2012

Education and career

Werner earned a diploma in mathematics from the University of Münster in 1991.[2] She earned her Ph.D. at the same university in 1995, jointly supervised by Christopher Deninger and Siegfried Bosch; her dissertation was Local Heights on Uniformized Abelian Varieties and on Mumford Curves.[2][3] She also completed her habilitation at Münster in 2000.[2]

She worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn in 1997–1998, and as an assistant at Münster from 1998 to 2003. She became a professor at the University of Siegen in 2004, but in the same year moved to the University of Stuttgart. She has been at the University of Frankfurt since 2007.[2]

Book

Werner is the author of a German-language book on elliptic curve cryptography, Elliptische Kurven in der Kryptographie (Springer, 2002).

Recognition

Werner was Emmy Noether Lecturer of the German Mathematical Society in Munich in 2010.[2][4]

References

  1. Birth year from author information for her edited volume with Katrin Wendland, Facettenreiche Mathematik: Einblicke in die moderne mathematische Forschung für alle, die mehr von Mathematik verstehen wollen (Springer, 2011), p. 461.
  2. Wissenschaftlicher Werdegang von Prof. Dr. Annette Werner (PDF) (in German)
  3. Annette Werner at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. Preise und Auszeichnungen (in German), German Mathematical Society, retrieved 2018-11-05
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