{"id":155506,"date":"2021-05-27T18:47:02","date_gmt":"2021-05-27T10:47:02","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/m.catawbaoil.com\/155506.html"},"modified":"2021-05-27T18:47:02","modified_gmt":"2021-05-27T10:47:02","slug":"daniel-c-mayer%e7%ae%80%e5%8e%86_austrian-science-fund-austria-drdaniel-c-mayer%e5%8f%97%e9%82%80%e5%8f%82%e4%bc%9a%e6%bc%94%e8%ae%b2_%e6%b4%bb%e5%8a%a8%e5%ae%b6","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/m.catawbaoil.com\/155506.html","title":{"rendered":"Daniel C. Mayer\u7b80\u5386_Austrian Science Fund, Austria DrDaniel C. Mayer\u53d7\u9080\u53c2\u4f1a\u6f14\u8bb2_\u6d3b\u52a8\u5bb6"},"content":{"rendered":"
Daniel C. Mayer, born 1956, has received his Ph.D. for mathematics, physics and chemistry in 1983 from the University of Graz, Austria, and his M.Sc. for psychology, pedagogics and didactics in 1995 from the University of Regensburg, Germany. Since 1982, he is university teacher for algebra, arithmetic and analysis. His primary research interests are algebraic number theory, class \feld theory and group theory. In 1990, he visited Hugh C. Williams at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada, where he re\fned the cohomological classi\fcation of dihedral \felds by Nicole Moser with di\u000berential principal fac- torizations and capitulation kernels, thereby proving a conjecture of Arnold Scholz. Further he developed the multiplicity theory for cubic and dihedral discriminants, based on quadratic ring class groups, awarded by an Erwin Schrodinger Grant from the Austrian Science Fund. A generalization followed 1991 for pure metacyclic discriminants in cooperation with Pierre Barrucand at Paris. Since 1992, he serves the scienti\fc community as reviewer and referee for various international mathematical journals. His joint research with Abdelmalek Azizi and collaborators in Morocco started in 2002 and concerns capitulation problems of ideal classes in number \feld extensions. Since 2012, he is the principal investigator and project leader of an international scienti\fc cooperation between Austria, Morocco, Australia, USA and Japan, supported by the Austrian Science Fund. In these last \fve years, his group theoretic innovations, in particular the investigation of descendant trees of p-groups, have led to considerable progress in the theory of maximal unrami\fed pro-p extensions of algebraic number \felds, which are known as towers of Hilbert p-class \felds, for an assigned prime number p. In particular, as a striking world record, he provided rigorous proofs for the \frst non-metabelian p-tower groups with soluble length three for p = 3 and p = 5, partially in cooperation with Michael R. Bush at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia, USA.<\/p>\n
Daniel C. Mayer, born 1956, has received his Ph.D. for ...<\/p>\n