At the
University of Göttingen, Cordes received in 1952 his doctorate. His doctoral dissertation, supervised by
Franz Rellich, is entitled
Separation von Variablen in Hilbertschen Raumen (Separation of variables in
Hilbert spaces). Cordes held a junior academic appointment at Göttingen from 1952 to 1956, when he was appointed to an assistant professorship at the
University of Southern California. At the
University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), he was an assistant professor to 1958 to 1959, an associate professor from 1959 to 1963, and a full professor from 1963 to 1991, when he retired as professor emeritus. In retirement he remained active in research. Cordes received an Alfred P. Sloan fellowship in 1959. He declined an invitation to address the
International Congress of Mathematicians held in Moscow in 1966. For the academic year 1971–1972, Cordes was a visiting professor at
Lund University, where he gave a course on pseudodifferential operators via a C*-algebra approach. His 19 doctoral students at UC Berkeley include
Michael G. Crandall and
Michael E. Taylor. Upon his death in 2018, Heinz Cordes had been married to his wife Hillgia for 63 years. They were the parents of a son and two daughters. ==Selected publications==