'Raoul Bott',
FRS (born
September 24 1923, died
December 20 2005) was a
mathematician known for numerous basic contributions to
geometry in its broad sense.
He was born in
Budapest, grew up in
Slovakia, but spent his working life in the
United States. His family emigrated to
Canada in 1938, and subsequently he served in the
Canadian Army in
Europe during
World War II. He later went to college at
McGill University in
Montreal, and then earned a
Ph.D. from
Carnegie Mellon University in
Pittsburgh. Afterward, he began teaching at the
University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor. He was a professor at
Harvard University from 1959 to 1999, and received the
Wolf Prize in 2000. In 2005, he was elected an Overseas Fellow of the
Royal Society of London. He died in
San Diego after a battle with cancer.
Initially he worked on the theory of
electrical circuits (
Bott-Duffin theorem from
1949), then switched to pure mathematics.
He studied the
homotopy theory of
Lie groups, using methods from
Morse theory, leading to the
Bott periodicity theorem (1956). In the course of this work, he introduced
Morse-Bott functions, an important generalization of Morse functions.
This led to his role as collaborator over many years with
Michael Atiyah, initially via the part played by periodicity in
K-theory. Bott made important contributions towards the
index theorem, especially in formulating related
fixed-point theorems, in particular the so-called '
Woods Hole fixed-point theorem', a combination of the
Riemann-Roch theorem and
Lefschetz fixed-point theorem (it is named after
Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the site of a conference at which collective discussion formulated it
[1]). The major Atiyah-Bott papers on what is now the
Atiyah–Bott fixed-point theorem were written in the years up to 1968; they collaborated further in recovering in contemporary language results of
Ivan Petrovsky on
hyperbolic partial differential equations, prompted by
Lars GÃ¥rding. In the 1980s, Atiyah and Bott investigated gauge theory, using the Yang-Mills equations on a Riemann surface to obtain topological information about the moduli spaces of stable bundles on Riemann surfaces.

Official photo
He is also known in connection with the
Borel-Bott-Weil theorem on representation theory of Lie groups via holomorphic
sheaves and their cohomology groups; and for work on
foliations.
In 1964, he was awarded the
Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry by the
American Mathematical Society.
His students included
Robert MacPherson,
Peter Landweber,
Daniel Quillen and
Stephen Smale.
His mother and aunts spoke
Hungarian. His Czech stepfather did not, so the principal language at home was
German. He had an English governesses from a young age, so he also spoke perfect
English (and retained a very faint English accent throughout his life). The language of his high school was
Slovak. Despite all this Bott claimed a distaste for learning languages.
External links
★
Commemorative website at Harvard Math Department
★
The Life and Works of Raoul Bott, by Loring Tu
★
"Raoul Bott, an Innovator in Mathematics, Dies at 82" (NY Times/ January 8, 2006)