Tadao Oda

Tadao Oda (小田忠雄 Oda Tadao) (born 1940, Kyoto) is a Japanese mathematician working in the field of algebraic geometry, especially toric varieties. The field of toric varieties was developed by Demazure, Mumford, Miyake, Oda and others in the 1970s. He is also known for a book on toric varieties: Convex Bodies and Algebraic Geometry: An Introduction to the Theory of Toric Varieties.[1]

In 1958 Oda graduated from Tokai High School in Nagoya, Japan, where Shigefumi Mori and Hisasi Morikawa also graduated from. He earned his bachelor's degree from Kyoto University in 1962, and five years later earned a Ph.D. under David Mumford from Harvard University with thesis Abelian varieties over a perfect field and Dieudonné Modules.[2] After completing his Ph.D., Oda was an associate professor at Nagoya University and became a professor at Tohoku University in 1975. He remained at the university for 28 years. He is an emeritus professor at Tohoku University. Oda wrote "Algebraic Geometry, Sendai, 1985" with Hisasi Morikawa, a former professor at Nagoya University.

Tadao has belonged to the Kiwanis Club of Sendai since 1999 and was elected to a three-year term as a trustee of Kiwanis International in 2008.[3]

Works

References

  1. Reid, Miles (1989). "Review: Convex bodies and algebraic geometry: An introduction to toric varieties by Tadao Oda". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 21: 360–364. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1989-15864-3.
  2. Tadao Oda at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Tadao Oda, Kiwanis International Trustee
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