Chow was a student in the US, graduating from the
University of Chicago in 1931. In 1932 he attended the
University of Göttingen, then transferred to the
Leipzig University where he worked with
van der Waerden. They produced a series of joint papers on
intersection theory, introducing in particular the use of what are now generally called
Chow coordinates (which were in some form familiar to
Arthur Cayley). He married Margot Victor in 1936, and took a position at the
National Central University in
Nanjing. His mathematical work was seriously affected by the wartime situation in China. He taught at the
National Tung-Chi University in
Shanghai in the academic year 1946–47, and then went to the
Institute for Advanced Study in
Princeton, where he returned to his research. From 1948 to 1977 he was a professor at
Johns Hopkins University. He was also a
stamp collector, known for his book
Shanghai Large Dragons, The First Issue of The Shanghai Local Post, published in 1996. ==Research==