Mrinal Kanti
Roychowdhury
Assistant
Professor
Dept of Mathematics
The University of Texas-Pan American
|
Office:
MAGC Building 3.702
Phone: (956) 381-3555
Email:
roychowdhurymk@utpa.edu
Fax: (956) 384-5091
Contents:
|
Teaching and Evaluations:
- Previous
Teaching: To see my Previouse Teaching click here.
- Teaching
Evaluations: To see the Evaluations of my
teaching click here.
Home
Education:
- M.Sc. (Mathematics with
specialization in Adavanced Functional Analysis and Advanced Topology),
Jadavpur
University, Kolkata, India.
Home
Research Interest: Applied Mathematics, Ergodic Theory and Dynamical
Systems, Fractals. Current research concentration: Quantization Theory and Fixed Point Theory.
Home
Academic Award: Gold
Medal (for the highest
examination score in B.Sc.(Mathematics Honors) in the Tripura
University system, Tripura, India).
Home
Previous Positions:
- From
September 2007 to August 2008, Visiting Assistant Professor, Dept of
Mathematics, University of North
Texas, Denton, TX, USA.
- From
August 2005 to August 2007, Postdoctoral Fellow, Dept of
Mathematics, Colorado
State Univeristy to work in Ergodic Theory with Professor Daniel J. Rudolph,
Fort
Collins, CO, USA.
- June-July 2005, Mathematics Teacher, Wesleyan
Upward Bound/ ConnCAP, Wesleyan University, CT, USA.
- From
September 2001 to May 2005, Graduate Teaching
Assistant, Dept of Mathematics,
Wesleyan University,
Middletown, CT, USA.
- From
February 1997 to August 2001, Full Time Assistant Teacher of
Mathematics, Netaji
Subhash Vidyaniketan (Higher Secondary School), Agartala, Tripura,
India.
Home
Publications:
- Quantization dimension function and
ergodic measure with bounded distortion, to appear, Bulletin of
the Polish Academy of Sciences.
- Fixed point theorems for generalized
weakly contractive mappings (with Ramendra Krishna Bose) , to
appear, Surveys in Mathematics and its Applications).
- Nearly continuous Kakutani
equivalence of adding machines (with Daniel
J. Rudolph), Journal of Modern
Dynamics, Volume 3, No. 1, 2009, 103-119.
- Any two
irreducible Markov chains are finitarily orbit equivalent (with Daniel
J. Rudolph) , to appear, Israel Journal of Mathematics.
- Any two
irreducible Markov Chains of equal entropy are finitariy Kakutani
equivalent (with Daniel
J. Rudolph), Israel Journal of Mathematics, 165
(2008), no. 1, 29-41.
- Finitary orbit
equivalence and measured Bratteli diagrams (with T.
Hamachi and M. S. Keane) , Colloquium Mathematicum, 110
(2008), no. 2, 363-382.
- The Morse
minimal system is finitarily Kakutani equivalent to the binary odometer
(with Daniel
J. Rudolph), Fundamenta
Mathematicae, 198 (2008), no. 2, 149-163.
- Irrational
rotation of the circle and the binary odometer are finitarily orbit
equivalent, Publications of the Research Institute for Mathemtical
Sciences, 43 (2007), no 2, 385-402.
- $\{m_n\}$-odometer
and the binary odometer are finitarily orbit equivalent, Contemporary
Mathematics, AMS, 430 (2007), 123-134.
Home
Conference attended
and
given Talks:
- (with Talk)
February 19-22, 2009,
Probability and Ergodic Theory Workshop at UNC
Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
- (with Talk) June 18-20,
2008, Pingree Park Dynamics Workshop, Colorado State University, Fort
Collins, CO, USA.
- June 11-15,
2008, 3rd Conference on Analysis and Probability on Fractals, Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
- (with Talk) October 5-6, 2007, AMS Fall Sectional
Meetings, Depaul University,Chicago, IL, USA.
- (with Talk)
February 16-19, 2006,
Probability and Ergodic Theory Workshop at UNC
Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
- August 15-19,
2005, PIMS Northwest
Dynamics Symposium, University of Victoria, B.C., Canada.
- May 14-16,
2005, Mellon Workshop on
p-adic dynamics, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, USA.
- April 10, 2005, Shizuo Kakutani
Memorial Conference, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, USA.
- (with Talk)
March 19-22, 2005,
Maryland-Penn State Dynamics Workshop, University of Maryland, College
Park, MD, USA.
- (with Talk)
February 18-20, 2005,
Probability and Ergodic Theory Workshop at UNC Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
- January 5-8, 2005, Joint Mathematics
Meetings, Atlanta.
- December 3,
2004, Seminar on
Binomial Transformation, Thomas J. Watson Research Center (IBM),
Yorktown Height, New York, USA.
- August 12-14,
2004, Math Festival,
Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Home
Some
Interesting links:
Home