Greg Hjorth

Australian Professor of Mathematics, chess International Master and joint Commonwealth Chess Champion
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian Professor of Mathematics, chess International Master and joint Commonwealth Chess Champion
PlacesAustralia
wasMathematician Chess player Educator
Work fieldAcademia Mathematics Sports
Gender
Male
Birth14 June 1963, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Death13 January 2011Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (aged 47 years)
The details

Biography

Greg Hjorth (14 June 1963 – 13 January 2011) was an Australian Professor of Mathematics, chess International Master (1984) and joint (with Ian Rogers) Commonwealth Champion in 1983. He worked in the field of mathematical logic.

Mathematical career

Hjorth earned his Ph.D. in 1993, under the direction of W. Hugh Woodin, with a dissertation entitled On the influence of second uniform indiscernible. He held faculty positions at the University of California, Los Angeles and the University of Melbourne. Among his most important contributions to set theory was the so-called theory of turbulence, used in the theory of Borel equivalence relations.

Chess career

Hjorth won the Doeberl Cup in Canberra in 1982, 1985 and 1987 and played for Australia in the Chess Olympiads of 1982, 1984 and 1986.

His best single performance was at Brighton (BCF Championship) 1984, where he scored four of seven possible points (57%) against 2551-rated opposition, for a performance rating of 2570.

Death

Hjorth died of a heart attack in Melbourne, on 13 January 2011.

Book

  • G. Hjorth: Classification and Orbit Equivalence Relations, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, 75, American Mathematical Society, Providence, Rhode Island, 2000.
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