Adam Kanigowski
Adam Kanigowski is a Polish mathematician specializing in dynamical systems and ergodic theory. He is a professor at the University of Maryland.
Education
Kanigowski was born in Toruń. He earned his master's degree in mathematics from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń in 2012, and his Ph.D. in 2015 from the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, under the supervision of Mariusz Lemańczyk and Joanna Kułaga-Przymus. His dissertation was entitled Własności ergodyczne gładkich potoków na powierzchniach and awarded the International Stefan Banach Prize in 2016.Career and research
After graduating, Kanigowski joined Penn State University as an S. Chowla Research Assistant Professor in 2015 and then joined UMD as an assistant professor in 2018, where he was promoted to full professor in 2024. Since December 2022, Kanigowski has led a flagship project at Jagiellonian University that partly supports a research collaboration with UMD.Kanigowski's research interests include dynamical systems and ergodic theory as well as their interaction with number theory, geometry and probability theory. In particular, he is interested in randomness and chaos in smooth dynamical systems, classification problems in abstract ergodic theory, and non-standard ergodic theorems that find application in number theory. Together with collaborators, he solved several longstanding open problems and conjuctures, such as the Rokhlin problem, the Sarnak hypothesis, the Katok hypothesis and the Ratner problem.
Kanigowski has published more than 30 papers in premier mathematical journals including the most prestigious ones, such as Annals of Mathematics, Journal of the American Mathematical Society, and Inventiones Mathematicae. Among his collaborators are Dmitry Dolgopyat, Bassam Fayad, Giovanni Forni, Mariusz Lemańczyk, Maksym Radziwiłł, Federico Rodriguez Hertz, and Corinna Ulcigrai.