Skip Garibaldi | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Purdue University, University of California, San Diego |
Scientific career | |
Fields | mathematics, algebraic groups |
Institutions | Emory University, UCLA |
Doctoral advisor | Adrian Wadsworth |
Skip Garibaldi is an American mathematician doing research on algebraic groups and especially exceptional groups.
Garibaldi dropped out of high school to attend Purdue University, where he earned B.S. degrees in mathematics and in computer science.[1] He then obtained a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, San Diego in 1998. His doctoral thesis was on triality and algebraic groups. After holding positions at ETH Zurich and the University of California, Los Angeles, (with Jared Hersh serving as his long-time Reader and typist) he joined the faculty at Emory University in 2002, and was eventually promoted to Winship Distinguished Research Professor.[2] In 2013 he became associate director of IPAM at UCLA.[3]
Garibaldi plays the lottery and has given some math-based tips on how to increase bettors' chances of winning lotto games, particularly the Powerball and Mega Millions. For instance, he advises against betting on the same numbers (as lotto winner Richard Lustig once advocated) in favor of randomly selected numbers, explaining that the latter decrease the probability of splitting the jackpot with another bettor using the former, and that the odds of winning using either method are ultimately the same.[4]
Garibaldi's most-cited work is the book "Cohomological invariants in Galois cohomology"[5][6] written with Alexander Merkurjev and Jean-Pierre Serre, which gives the foundations of the theory of cohomological invariants of algebraic groups. His long work "Cohomological invariants: exceptional groups and Spin groups"[7] built on this theme.
He received press coverage[8] for his paper "There is no Theory of Everything inside E8"[9] with Jacques Distler proposing a disproof of Garrett Lisi's "An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Everything".
He is also known for his less-technical articles on the lottery[1][10] which led to TV appearances and policy changes in Florida[11] and Georgia.[12] He contributed to a story in Slate magazine by Chris Wilson[13] about arranging stars on the US flag that was reported on CBS News Sunday Morning.
In 2011 he received the Lester R. Ford Award from the Mathematical Association of America.[1]
He was included in the 2019 class of fellows of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to group theory and service to the mathematical community, particularly in support of promoting mathematics to a wide audience".[14]