Richard 
              Montgomery, University of California, Santa Cruz will deliver a 
              talk entitled, "An Octahedral Gem Hidden in Newton's Three 
              Body Problem." The lecture will take place on July 25, 2012 
              at the Fields Institute, as part of the conference on "Geometry, 
              Symmetry, Dynamics, and Control: The Legacy of Jerry Marsden."
            Richard Montgomery received undergraduate degrees in both mathematics 
              and physics from Sonoma State in Northern California. He completed 
              his PhD under Jerry Marsden at Berkeley in 1986, after which he 
              held a Moore Instructorship at MIT for two years, followed by two 
              years of postdoctoral studies at University of California, Berkeley. 
            
            Montgomery's research fields are geometric mechanics, celestial 
              mechanics, control theory and differential geometry and is perhaps 
              best known for his rediscovery - with Alain Chenciner - of Cris 
              Moore's figure eight solution to the three-body problem, which led 
              to numerous new 'choreography' solutions. He also established the 
              existence of the first-known abnormal minimizer in sub-Riemannian 
              geometry, and is known for investigations using gauge-theoretic 
              ideas of how a falling cat lands on its feet. He has written one 
              book on sub-Riemannian geometry.
            The PIMS Marsden Memorial Lecture Series is dedicated to the memory 
              of Jerrold E Marsden (1942-2010), a world-renowned Canadian applied 
              mathematician. Marsden was the Carl F Braun Professor of Control 
              and Dynamical Systems at Caltech, and prior to that he was at the 
              University of California, Berkeley, for many years. He did extensive 
              research in the areas of geometric mechanics, dynamical systems 
              and control theory. He was one of the original founders in the early 
              1970s of reduction theory for mechanical systems with symmetry, 
              which remains an active and much studied area of research today.
            The inaugural Marsden Memorial Lecture was given by Alan Weinstein 
              (University of California, Berkeley) in July of 2011 at ICIAM in 
              Vancouver. 
             
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