Frank Morgan Scientist

Frank Morgan is an American mathematician and the Webster Atwell '21 Professor of Mathematics at Williams College, specialising in geometric measure theory and minimal surfaces. He is most famous for proving the Double Bubble conjecture, that the minimum-surface-area enclosure of two given volumes is formed by three spherical patches meeting at 120-degree angles at a common circle. Morgan is a vice-president-elect of the American Mathematical Society.Morgan studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton University, and received his Ph.D. from Princeton in 1977, under the supervision of Frederick J. Almgren, Jr.. He taught at MIT for ten years before joining the Williams faculty.

Personal facts

Frank Morgan
Nationality
United States
Residence
United States
Education
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Princeton University
Known for
Double bubble conjecture

Search

Scientist

awards
Princeton University
National Science Foundation research grant
National Distinguished Teaching Award
doctoral advisor
doctoral student
Benny Cheng
Gary Lawlor
Julian Lander
Mohamed Messauodene
Field of study
Mathematics

Frank Morgan on Wikipedia