Bio

Frank Morgan’s proof with colleagues and students of the Double Bubble Conjecture is featured at the NSF Discoveries site. He has 200 publications, including six books: Geometric Measure Theory: a Beginner’s Guide (5th ed. 2016); Calculus Lite 2001, republished as Calculus 2012; Riemannian Geometry: a Beginner’s Guide 1998; The Math Chat Book 2000, based on his live, call-in Math Chat TV show and Math Chat columnReal Analysis 2005; and Real Analysis and Applications 2005. He has advised over 80 student publications. He has a personal blog and a blog at the Huffington Post.

Morgan went to MIT and Princeton, where his thesis advisor, Fred Almgren, introduced him to minimal surfaces. He then taught for ten years at MIT, where he served for three years as Undergraduate Mathematics Chairman, received the Everett Moore Baker Award for excellence in undergraduate teaching, and held the Cecil and Ida Green Career Development Chair. He spent leave years at Rice, Stanford, the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and Berkshire Community College. He served on the NSF Math Advisory Committee from 1994-97, and as chair of the Hudson River Undergraduate Mathematics Conference in 1997. In January, 1993, he received an inaugural MAA national award for distinguished teaching. In 1995 he represented mathematics research at the exhibition for Congress by the Coalition for National Science Funding. He received the Allen High School Distinguished Alumni Award and an honorary doctorate from Cedar Crest College. For 1997-98 he held the first Visiting Professorship for Distinguished Teaching at Princeton University. From 2000-2002 he served as Second Vice-President of the Mathematical Association of America, from 2009-2012 as Vice-President of the American Mathematical Society, when he launched the AMS Graduate Student Blog, by and for mathematics graduate students. He served as Editor-in-Chief of Notices of the American Mathematical Society.

Morgan served at Williams as Mathematics Department Chair and founding director of an NSF undergraduate research project. He is currently Webster Atwell ’21 Professor of Mathematics, EmeritusHe lives on the beach in Ocean City, New Jersey, and goes in the ocean every day summer and winter.

See also Wikipedia, “A Math Chat with Frank Morgan” by Donald J. Albers (Math Horizons, Sept. 1997),  “Geometry Lessons” by Jeffrey Hildner (Christ. Sci. J., Oct. 2006), and FrankFest/video.