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Yakov Sinai

Yakov Sinai
Yakov G Sinai photo.jpg
Yakov G. Sinai
Born Yakov Grigorevich Sinai
(1935-09-21) September 21, 1935 (age 81)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Residence Princeton, New Jersey, United States
Nationality Russian / American
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Moscow State University, Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, Princeton University
Alma mater Moscow State University
Doctoral advisor Andrey Kolmogorov
Doctoral students Leonid Bunimovich
Nikolai Chernov
Dmitry Dolgopyat
Svetlana Jitomirskaya
Anatole Katok
Grigory Margulis
Leonid Polterovich
Marina Ratner
Corinna Ulcigrai
András Krámli
Known for Measure-preserving dynamical systems, various works on dynamical systems, mathematical and statistical physics, probability theory, mathematical fluid dynamics
Notable awards Boltzmann Medal (1986)
Dannie Heineman Prize (1990)
Dirac Prize (1992)
Wolf Prize (1997)
Nemmers Prize (2002)
Lagrange Prize (2008)
Henri Poincaré Prize (2009)
Foreign Member of the Royal Society (2009)
Leroy P. Steele Prize (2013)
Abel Prize (2014)
Marcel Grossmann Award (2015)
Spouse Elena B. Vul

Yakov Grigorevich Sinai (Russian: Я́ков Григо́рьевич Сина́й; born September 21, 1935) is a mathematician known for his work on dynamical systems. He contributed to the modern metric theory of dynamical systems and connected the world of deterministic (dynamical) systems with the world of probabilistic (stochastic) systems. He has also worked on mathematical physics and probability theory. His efforts have provided the groundwork for advances in the physical sciences.

Sinai has won several awards, including the Nemmers Prize, the Wolf Prize in Mathematics and the Abel Prize.

Yakov Grigorevich Sinai was born into a Russian Jewish academic family on September 21, 1935, in Moscow, Soviet Union (now Russia). His parents, Nadezda Kagan and Gregory Sinai, were both microbiologists. His grandfather, Veniamin Kagan, headed the Department of Differential Geometry at Moscow State University and was a major influence on Sinai's life.

Sinai received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Moscow State University. In 1960, he earned his Ph.D., also from Moscow State; his adviser was Andrey Kolmogorov. Together with Kolmogorov, he showed that even for "unpredictable" dynamic systems, the level of unpredictability of motion can be described mathematically. In their idea, which became known as Kolmogorov–Sinai entropy, a system with zero entropy is entirely predictable, while a system with non-zero entropy has an unpredictability factor directly related to the amount of entropy.

In 1963, Sinai introduced the idea of dynamical billiards, also known as "Sinai Billiards". In this idealized system, a particle bounces around inside a square boundary without loss of energy. Inside the square is a circular wall, of which the particle also bounces off. He then proved that for most initial trajectories of the ball, this system is ergodic, that is, after a long time, the amount of that time the ball will have spent in any given region on the surface of the table is approximately proportional to the area of that region. It was the first time anyone proved a dynamic system was ergodic.


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