Donald E. Marshall
Professor, appointed 1976 (Ph.D. UCLA 1976)
Research area: Complex analysis
Personal Web page: http://www.math.washington.edu/~marshall/personal.html
E-mail: marshall[_a_t_]math.washington.edu
Phone: 543-9352
Office: PDL C-555
Office hours: Whenever the door is open or by appointment
Courses taught this quarter: MATH 581 C
Hobbies: Hiking, soccer, Scandinavian folk-dancing, auto repair, sailing
Professional interests
My research centers on problems about functions of one complex variable, usually involving geometric estimates of harmonic measure. Many times these problems arise in other areas of mathematical research such as functional analysis, numerical analysis and probability. Topics include bounded analytic functions, univalent functions, extremal length, harmonic measure and the numerical computation of conformal maps.
The recently completed book, Harmonic Measure, with J. Garnett,
devotes the first four chapters to classical material suitable for a
second year course (graduate) in complex analysis, while the last
four chapters cover recent advances on Bloch functions, Brennan's
conjecture, harmonic measure in infinitely connected domains, rectifiability and other topics in geometric function theory.
Selected bibliography
The Loewner Differential Equation and Slit Mappings, with S. Rohde, J. Amer.
Math. Soc. 18 (2005), no. 4, 763-778.
"Harmonic Measure", with J. Garnett, Cambridge University Press, June 2005,
587pp.
A Lipschitz Decomposition of Minimal Surfaces, with J. Garnett and P. Jones,
J. Diff. Geo. 35 (1992), 659-673.
Frequency Domain Design and Analytic Selections, with J. W. Helton, Indiana
Univ. Math. J. 39 (1990), 157-184.
On a Sharp Inequality Concerning the Dirichlet Integral, with S.-Y.A. Chang,
Amer. J. Math. 107 (1985), 1015-1033.
Critical Points of Green's
Function, Harmonic Measure, and the Corona Problem, with P. Jones, Ark. för
Mat. 23 (1985), 281-314.
Subalgebras of L∞
containing H∞, Acta Math. 137 (1976), 91-98.
Zipper, Fortran programs for numerical computation of conformal maps, and C
programs for X-11 graphics display of the maps. Sample pictures, Fortran and C code available at URL:
http://www.math.washington.edu/~marshall/zipper.html