Mu-Tao Wang


Mu-Tao Wang is a Taiwanese mathematician who is a professor of mathematics at Columbia University.

Education

In 1984, Wang enrolled in National Taiwan University with the initial intent to study international business but, after a year, he switched to mathematics. He graduated from NTU with his Bachelor of Science in 1988 and his Master of Science in 1992, both in mathematics. Wang then completed advanced studies in the United States, earning his Ph.D. in mathematics in 1998 from Harvard University. His doctoral dissertation, "Generalized harmonic maps and representations of discrete groups," was supervised by Fields Medal laureate Shing-Tung Yau and mathematician David Kazhdan.

Career

Wang joined the Columbia faculty as an assistant professor in 2001, and was appointed full professor in 2009. Before joining the faculty at Columbia, Wang was Szego Assistant Professor at Stanford University.
He was a Sloan Research Fellow from 2003 to 2005. In 2007, he was named a Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences and was awarded the Chern Prize. Wang is a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society and won the Morningside [Gold Medal of Mathematics] in 2010.
In 2010, Wang delivered the plenary address at the International Congress of Chinese Mathematicians, and was plenary speaker at the International Congress on Mathematical Physics. In addition, he was also plenary speaker at the International Conference on Differential Geometry in 2011. He was elected to Academia Sinica in 2022.
After winning the Morningside Medal, Wang told interviewers that he did not consider himself a particularly good student and did not consistently make good grades. He struggled with studying topics which did not interest him just for the grade, but spends a lot of time on subjects which interested him. He credits his career in mathematics to two people: his mother and his thesis adviser Shing-Tung Yau. He cites his mother's support and understanding of his decision to switch to mathematics in university despite it being a much less lucrative field, and describes meeting Yau in 1992 as the pivotal point in his life when he decided to make mathematics research his primary focus.

Work

Wang's research is focused in the fields of differential geometry and mathematical physics, specifically general relativity. He has studied higher co-dimensional mean curvature flow extensively, leading to criteria relating to the flow's existence, regularity, and convergence. In the field of general relativity, he is especially known for his work on quasilocal mass–energy; the Wang-Yau quasi-local mass is named in his honor.

Selected bibliography