Randall Dougherty Scientist

Randall Dougherty (born 1961) is an American mathematician. Dougherty has made contributions in widely varying areas of mathematics, including set theory, logic, real analysis, discrete mathematics, computational geometry, information theory and coding theory.Dougherty is a three-time winner of the U.S.A. Mathematical Olympiad, 1976, 1977, 1978 and a three-time medalist in the International Mathematical Olympiad. He is also a three-time Putnam Fellow 1978, 1979, 1980. Dougherty earned his Ph.D. in 1985 at University of California, Berkeley under the direction of Jack Silver.With Matthew Foreman he showed that the Banach-Tarski decomposition is possible with pieces with the Baire property, solving a problem of Marczewski that remained unsolved for more than 60 years.With Chris Freiling and Ken Zeger, he showed that linear codes are insufficient to gain the full advantages of network coding.

Personal facts

Randall Dougherty
Birth dateJanuary 01, 1961
Nationality
United States
Education
University of California Berkeley

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Scientist

doctoral advisor
doctoral student
Cary Lee
Field of study
Mathematics

Randall Dougherty on Wikipedia