Jürgen Gärtner
Jürgen Gärtner is a German mathematician, specializing in probability theory and analysis.
Gärtner graduated in 1973 with Diplom from TU Dresden. He received in 1976 his Ph.D. from Lomonosov University under the supervision of Mark Freidlin. At the Weierstrass Institute, Gärtner was from 1976 to 1985 a research associate; he habilitated there in 1984 with Dissertation B: Zur Ausbreitung von Wellenfronten für Reaktions-Diffusions-Gleichungen. At the Weierstrass Institute he was from 1985 to 1995 the head of the probability group. He was a professor of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR from 1988 until its disbandment in late 1991. At TU Berlin he was from 1992 to 2011 a professor, retiring as professor emeritus in 2011.
In 1977 he proved a general form of Cramér's Theorem in the theory of large deviations ; the theorem is known as the Gärtner-Ellis Large Deviations Principle. In 1982 Gärtner wrote an important paper on the famous KPP equation. In 1987 Gärtner, with Donald A. Dawson, introduced the construction of a projective limit in the LDP. From 1987 to 1989 Gärtner and Dawson wrote a series of important papers on the McKean-Vlasov process. Their results were extended by other mathematicians in the 1990s to random mean-field interactions and to spin-glass mean-field interactions. In 1990 Gärtner and Molchanov wrote a seminal paper on intermittency in the parabolic Anderson model; the paper introduced a new approach to intermittency via the study of Lyapunov coefficients.
Gärtner was a member from 1984 to 1992 of the editorial board of Probability Theory and Related Fields and from 1990 to 2000 of the editorial board of Mathematische Nachrichten.
In 1992 Gärtner was an invited lecturer at the first European Congress of Mathematics in Paris. In 1994 he was an invited speaker with talk Parabolic Systems in Random Media and Aspects of Intermittency at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Zurich. A conference was held in honor of his 60th birthday.Selected publications