Nicholas Varopoulos
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Nicholas Varopoulos
Nicholas Theodore Varopoulos ( el, Νικόλαος Βαρόπουλος, ''Nikolaos Varopoulos'', also ''Nicolas Varopoulos''; born 16 June 1940) is a Greek mathematician, who works on harmonic analysis and especially analysis on Lie groups. Varopoulos is the son of the Thessaloniki mathematics professor Theodoros Varopoulos, Theodore Varopoulos (1894–1957). Nicholas Varopoulos received his PhD in 1965 from Cambridge University under John Hunter Williamson. There he was in 1965 a lecturer in mathematics. In the academic year 1966–1967 he was at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Varopoulos became a professor at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Université Paris VI). In 1968 Varopoulos became the first recipient of the Salem Prize. In 1990 he was an list of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited Speakers, invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyoto (''Analysis and geometry on groups'') and in 1 ...
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Thessaloniki
Thessaloniki (; el, Θεσσαλονίκη, , also known as Thessalonica (), Saloniki, or Salonica (), is the second-largest city in Greece, with over one million inhabitants in its metropolitan area, and the capital of the geographic region of Macedonia, the administrative region of Central Macedonia and the Decentralized Administration of Macedonia and Thrace. It is also known in Greek as (), literally "the co-capital", a reference to its historical status as the () or "co-reigning" city of the Byzantine Empire alongside Constantinople. Thessaloniki is located on the Thermaic Gulf, at the northwest corner of the Aegean Sea. It is bounded on the west by the delta of the Axios. The municipality of Thessaloniki, the historical center, had a population of 317,778 in 2021, while the Thessaloniki metropolitan area had 1,091,424 inhabitants in 2021. It is Greece's second major economic, industrial, commercial and political centre, and a major transportation hub for Greece and s ...
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