Christoph Thiele
Christoph Thiele (born 10. September 1968 in Darmstadt) is a German mathematician working in the field of harmonic analysis. After completing his undergraduate studies at TU Darmstadt and Bielefeld University, he obtained his Ph.D. in 1995 at Yale under the supervision of Ronald Coifman. After spending time at UCLA, where he was promoted to full professor, he occupied the Hausdorff Chair at the University of Bonn.He is famous for work (joint with Michael Lacey) on the bilinear Hilbert transform and for giving a simplified proof of Carleson's theorem; the techniques in this proof have deeply influenced the field of time–frequency analysis. He was a recipient of the 1996 Salem Prize, an invited speaker at the 2002 International Congress of Mathematicians and a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society. Provided by Wikipedia
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Phosphatidylcholine synthesis and remodeling in brain endothelial cells by Mohamed H. Yaghmour, Theja Sajeevan, Christoph Thiele, Lars Kuerschner
Published 2025-04-01Get full text
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Enhanced lipid biosynthesis in human tumor-induced macrophages contributes to their protumoral characteristics by Mihai G Netea, Katrin Rabold, Gosse J Adema, Anna Aschenbrenner, Christoph Thiele, Collins K Boahen, Alexander Schiltmans, Johannes W A Smit, Joachim L Schultze, Romana T Netea-Maier
Published 2020-10-01Get full text
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Control of Golgi- V-ATPase through Sac1-dependent co-regulation of PI(4)P and cholesterol by Xin Zhou, Miesje M. van der Stoel, Shreyas Kaptan, Haoran Li, Shiqian Li, Maarit Hölttä, Helena Vihinen, Eija Jokitalo, Christoph Thiele, Olli Pietiläinen, Shin Morioka, Junko Sasaki, Takehiko Sasaki, Ilpo Vattulainen, Elina Ikonen
Published 2025-08-01Get full text
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