
Pierre Deligne, March 2005
'Pierre Deligne' (born
3 October 1944) is a
Belgian mathematician. He is known for fundamental work on the
Weil conjectures, leading finally to a complete proof in
1973. He was born in
Brussels, and studied at the
Universite Libre de Bruxelles (ULB).
After completing a
doctorate, he worked with
Alexander Grothendieck at the
Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques (IHÉS) near
Paris, initially on the generalisation within
scheme theory of
Zariski's main theorem. He worked closely with
Jean-Pierre Serre, leading to important results on the l-adic representations attached to
modular forms, and the conjectural
functional equations of
L-functions. He also collaborated with
David Mumford on a new description of the
moduli spaces for curves: this work has been much used in later developments arising from
string theory.
From 1970 until 1984, when he moved to the
Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, Deligne was a permanent member of the IHÉS staff. During this time he did much important work, besides the proof of the Weil conjectures: in particular with
George Lusztig on the use of
étale cohomology to construct representations of
finite groups of Lie type, and with Rapoport on the moduli spaces from the 'fine' arithmetic point of view, with application to
modular forms. He received a
Fields Medal in 1978.
In terms of the completion of some of the underlying Grothendieck program of research, he defined
absolute Hodge cycles, as a surrogate for the missing and still largely conjectural theory of
motives. This idea allows one to get around the lack of knowledge of the
Hodge conjecture, for some applications. He reworked the
tannakian category theory in his paper for the ''Grothendieck Festschrift'', employing
Beck's theorem – the Tannakian category concept being the categorical expression of the linearity of the theory of motives as the ultimate Weil cohomology. All this is part of the ''yoga of weights'', uniting
Hodge theory and the l-adic Galois representations. The
Shimura variety theory is related, by the idea that such varieties should parametrize not just good (arithmetically interesting) families of Hodge structures, but actual motives. This theory isn't yet a finished product – and more recent trends have used
K-theory approaches.
He was awarded the
Crafoord Prize in 1988 and the
Balzan Prize in 2004.
Selected publications
★
La conjecture de Weil: I, , Pierre, Deligne, Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS, 1974
★
La conjecture de Weil: II, , Pierre, Deligne, Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS, 1980
★
Commensurabilities among Lattices in PU(1,n), , Pierre, Deligne, Princeton University Press, 1993,
See also
★
Deligne conjecture
★
Deligne-Mumford moduli space of curves
★
Deligne cohomology