News & Events
- won a 2022 ! The Marinus Smith Award recognizes faculty and staff members who have had a particularly positive impact on our students.
- In 2022, Associate Professors Agnès Beaudry and Sean O’Rourke received Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) awards from the National Science Foundation.The CAREER award is one of NSF's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization. Dr. Beaudry will use her award to advance homotopy theory, while Dr. O'Rourke will use his award to advance random matrix theory.For more details on their work and plans see this article in the ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Arts and Sciences Magazine.
- In May 2022, was elected to the as an . Scientists who have made exceptional contributions to scientific research, who live outside of Hungary, and who identify as Hungarian are eligible be elected as external members of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Professor Szendrei was honored for her work on the structure theory of finite algebras, clone theory, general commutator theory, and algorithmic questions for finite algebras.
- Dr. Marcos Mazari-Armida received the for his Ph.D. thesis Remarks on classification theory for abstract elementary classes with applications to abelian group theory and ring theory.
The Sacks Prize is awarded annually for the most outstanding doctoral dissertation in mathematical logic. This is an international prize, with no restriction on the nationality of the candidate or the university where the doctorate is granted. For more details on Marcos's work see this article in Arts and Sciences Magazine. - Professor Jeanne Clelland and her collaborators Beth Malmskog and Flavia Sancier-Barbosa at ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ College and Daryl DeFord at Washington State University analyze the resdistricting of ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ using ensemble analysis. See details in this article and the research team's reports on the congressional and state legislative districts on their .
The Math Department welcomes our new PostDocs in Fall 2021:
Menevse Eryuzlu completed her PhD at Arizona State University in 2021. Her mathematical research centers on C*-algebras, more specifically C*-correspondences and their Toeplitz and Cuntz-Pimsner algebras.
Padi Fuster Aguilera is a 2021 PhD graduate from Tulane University under the direction of Kyle Zhao and Vincent Martinez. Padi's research interests are Partial Differential Equations and Riemannian Geometry.
Marcos Mazari-Armida received his PhD at Carnegie Mellon University in 2021 under the direction of Rami Grossberg. His research interests are abstract elementary classes and their applications to the model theory of abelian groups and modules.
James Rickards is a 2021 PhD graduate from McGill University under the supervision of Henri Darmon. His research interests are in algebraic and computational number theory.
- Assistant Professor Kyle Luh received an Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement Award from the Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) in June 2021.The awards recognize faculty members for their work in any of five science and technology disciplines: engineering or applied science; life sciences; mathematics and computer science; physical sciences; and policy, management or education.
- Associate Professors Katherine Stange and Jonathan Wise have been named 2021 . They are among 40 mathematicians nationwide to win this recognition this year, which supports academic leaves for research. Katherine Stange plans to spend her sabbatical studying the arithmetic of Apollonian circle packings and Kleinian groups, as well as topics in Diophantine approximation and post-quantum cryptography. Jonathan Wise will study moduli spaces of algebraic curves and abelian varieties using techniques from logarithmic and tropical geometry. For more details on their work and plans see this article in the ÃÛÌÇÖ±²¥ Arts and Science Magazine.
Problem of the Month
Try the (due May 15)
Competition info and rules can be found here.
Congratulations to Eirik Skildheim for a first-place solution to the October Problem of the Month!