Piatetski-Shapiro was born in 1929 in
Moscow,
Soviet Union. Both his father, Iosif Grigor'evich, and mother, Sofia Arkadievna, were from traditional Jewish families, which had become assimilated. His father was from
Berdichev, a small city in
Ukraine, with a largely Jewish population. His mother was from
Gomel, a similar small city in
Belarus. Both parents' families were middle-class, but they sank into poverty after the October revolution of 1917. He became interested in mathematics at the age of 10, struck, as he wrote in his short memoir, "by the charm and unusual beauty of negative numbers", which his father, a PhD in chemical engineering, showed him. In 1952, Piatetski-Shapiro won the Moscow Mathematical Society Prize for a Young Mathematician for work done while still an undergraduate at Moscow University. His winning paper contained a solution to the problem of the French analyst
Raphaël Salem on
sets of uniqueness of
trigonometric series. The award was especially remarkable because of the atmosphere of strong
anti-Semitism in Soviet Union at that time. Despite the award, and a very strong recommendation by his mentor
Alexander O. Gelfond, a professor of mathematics at
Moscow University and an important
Communist Party member (Gelfond’s father was a friend of
Lenin), Piatetski-Shapiro’s application to graduate program at Moscow University was rejected. He was ultimately admitted to the
Moscow Pedagogical Institute, where he received his Ph.D. in 1954 under the direction of
Alexander Buchstab. His early work was in classical analytic number theory. This includes his paper on what is now known as the
Piatetski-Shapiro prime number theorem, which states that, for 1 ≤
c ≤ 12/11, the number of integers 1 ≤
n ≤
x for which the integer part of
nc is prime is asymptotically
x /
c log
x as
x → ∞. After leaving the Moscow Pedagogical Institute, he spent a year at the
Steklov Institute, where he received the advanced Doctor of Sciences degree, also in 1954, under the direction of
Igor Shafarevich. His contact with Shafarevich, who was a professor at the Steklov Institute, broadened Piatetski-Shapiro's mathematical outlook and directed his attention to modern number theory and algebraic geometry. This led, after a while, to the joint paper in which they proved a
Torelli theorem for
K3 surfaces. ==Moscow years: 1960s==