Research Bio
Michael Hutchings is a mathematician whose research investigates geometry, topology, and dynamical systems. He is best known for his work on embedded contact homology, a powerful invariant that links topology and symplectic geometry. Hutchings’s research integrates geometric analysis, topology, and dynamical systems to explore the structure of three-dimensional manifolds and periodic orbits. His work contributes to understanding deep connections between geometry, topology, and mathematical physics.
He is Professor of Mathematics at UC Berkeley and a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society. His research has been published in Annals of Mathematics, Inventiones Mathematicae, and Geometry & Topology. At Berkeley he teaches mathematics at all levels.
Research Expertise and Interest
mathematics, symplectic geometry, contact geometry, low dimensional topology, dynamics
In the News
Berkeley Faculty Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Teaching
Supervised Independent Study and Research [MATH 199]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [MATH 199]
Seminars [MATH 290]
Individual Research [MATH 295]
Individual Study for Doctoral Students [MATH 602]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [MATH 199]
Differential Topology [MATH 214]
Seminars [MATH 290]
Individual Research [MATH 295]
Reading Course for Graduate Students [MATH 299]
Individual Study for Doctoral Students [MATH 602]
Honors Multivariable Calculus [MATH H53]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [MATH 199]
Topics in Differential Geometry [MATH 277]
Seminars [MATH 290]
Individual Research [MATH 295]
Individual Study for Doctoral Students [MATH 602]