Terence Gaffney

Terence Gaffney (born 9 March 1948) is an American mathematician who has made fundamental contributions to singularity theory – in particular, to the fields of singularities of maps and equisingularity theory.[1]

Terence Gaffney
Born (1948-07-09) July 9, 1948
Pennsylvania, United States
Alma materBoston College, Brandeis University
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsNortheastern University
Doctoral advisorEdgar Henry Brown Jr., Harold Levine

Professional career

He is a Professor of Mathematics at Northeastern University. He did his undergraduate studies at Boston College. He received his Ph.D. from Brandeis University in 1975 under the direction of Edgar Henry Brown Jr. and Harold Levine. In 1975 he became an AMS Centennial Fellow at MIT and a year later he joined the Brown University faculty as Tamarkind instructor. In 1979 Gaffney became professor at Northeastern University where he has remained ever since. He has served as department chair, graduate director, chair of the undergraduate curriculum committee, and faculty senator.[2]

Selected publications

See also

  • Mather-Gaffney criterion

References

  1. Wall, C.T.C. (2008), Gaffney's work on equisingularity (PDF).
  2. Terence Gaffney, Department of mathematics, Northeastern University, archived from the original on 2013-06-17.


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