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Varadhan to Receive 2007 Abel Prize

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#1
domi

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Varadhan to Receive 2007 Abel Prize:

The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters has announced that Srinivasa S. R. Varadhan of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences is the winner of the 2007 Abel Prize. Varadhan was awarded the prize "for his fundamental contributions to probability theory and in particular for creating a unified theory of large deviations." The Abel Committee also said that "Varadhan's theory of large deviations provides a unifying and efficient method for clarifying a rich variety of phenomena arising in complex stochastic systems, in fields as diverse as quantum field theory, statistical physics, population dynamics, econometrics and finance, and traffic engineering....Varadhan's work has great conceptual strength and ageless beauty. His ideas have been hugely influential and will continue to stimulate further research for a long time." The prize, which was first awarded in 2003, is worth over US$975,000. Varadhan is the second member of the Courant Institute to win the prize - Peter Lax won in 2005. Norway's King Harald will present the prize to Varadhan on May 22. The Abel Prize website has more information about Varadhan and the prize. [Item posted 3/22/07]

(From: http://www.ams.org/d...html#abel-2007)

From: http://www.abelprisen.no/en/

Srinivasa S. R. Varadhan is currently Professor of Mathematics and Frank J. Gould Professor of Science at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University. (Photo: Cheryl Sylivant)

Indian American mathematician is awarded the Abel Prize
The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters has decided to award the Abel Prize for 2007 to Srinivasa S.R. Varadhan, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York. He receives the prize ìfor his fundamental contributions to probability theory and in particular for creating a unified theory of large deviation”.

Probability theory is the mathematical tool for analyzing situations governed by chance. The theory of large deviations studies the occurrence of rare events. This subject has concrete applications to fields as diverse as physics, biology, economics, statistics, computer science, and engineering.

Varadhan’s theory of large deviations provides a unifying and efficient method for clarifying a rich variety of phenomena arising in complex stochastic systems, in fields as diverse as quantum field theory, statistical physics, population dynamics, econometrics and finance, and traffic engineering. It has also greatly expanded our ability to use computers to simulate and analyze the occurrence of rare events. Over the last four decades, the theory of large deviations has become a cornerstone of modern probability, both pure and applied.

ìVaradhan’s work has great conceptual strength and ageless beauty. His ideas have been hugely influential and will continue to stimulate further research for a long time”, to quote the Abel Committee.




From NYU website: http://www.nyu.edu/p...ses/detail/1522

Second NYU Winner of ìNobel Prize” of Mathematics In Three Years
Srinivasa S.R.Varadhan, a professor at New York University’s Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences since 1966, was today awarded the Abel Prize in Mathematics by the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters for ìhis fundamental contributions to probability theory and in particular for creating a unified theory of large deviations,” which the Academy characterized as ìhugely influential” and lauded for its ìgreat conceptual strength and ageless beauty.” He is expected to receive the Abel Prize from His Majesty, King Harald V of Norway, in Oslo on May 22nd. The honor is accompanied by a prize of $850,000.
For a Publications quality image of Professor Varadhan, please follow this link: Srinivasa Varadhan Publications Photo
PHOTO CREDIT: Cheryl Sylivant
This is the second time in three years that an NYU mathematician has been the recipient of the Abel Pize: in 2005, Professor Peter Lax of the Courant Institute was awarded the Abel.
Professor Srinivasa Varadhan, who is known as Raghu, is the Frank J. Gould Professor of Science and professor of mathematics at NYU’s Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. He first came to Courant as a post-doctoral fellow in 1963 and has spent his entire professional life there, serving two terms as its director (1980-1984, and 1992-94).
NYU President John "từ cấm"ton said, ìWe are so happy and proud of Raghu. Not only is he an outstanding scholar, he is also a kind and wonderful colleague, a devoted teacher, and an exemplary ‘University citizen,’ serving with dedication and professionalism as director of the Courant Institute and on such bodies as the University Senate. This distinction is a well-deserved honor for a faculty member whose modesty and discretion are almost as great as his scholarly contributions. In the time that Raghu has been at NYU, our University has changed a great deal, but it is the persistent presence of scholars such as he that has enabled us to build NYU into what it is today and to continue to attract top scholars and researchers to our midst. I ask the entire NYU community to join me in congratulating Raghu.”
David McLaughlin, NYU’s Provost and former director of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, said, ìI have known Raghu personally for many years as a colleague and friend, and I would like to offer him my most enthusiastic congratulations; the Abel Committee could not have made a more worthy choice. The Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences enjoys a superb reputation in the scientific community for the caliber of the scholars it attracts, the quality of their research, and the influence of their work in so many fields where mathematics is applied. This award - the second time in three years that a faculty member at Courant has been so honored - is a wonderful recognition of the Institute’s commitment to excellence in the mathematical sciences, and a wonderful reflection on NYU. But most importantly, the award rightly acknowledges the importance and depth of Raghu’s contributions to probability theory and to science.”
Leslie Greengard, the director of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, said, ìIt is wonderful to hear that Raghu Varadhan has been awarded the 2007 Abel prize. His work is deep, beautiful, and incredibly important, having laid the foundation for much of modern probability theory. Raghu is also one of those rare individuals who works tirelessly on behalf of his students, on behalf of all his colleagues at Courant and NYU, and on behalf of the international mathematics community.”
Professor Varadhan - a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Society and the Third World Academy of Sciences - has been the recipient of many awards and honors, including the Birkhoff Prize (1994), the Margaret and Herman Sokol Award of NYU’s Faculty of Arts and Science (1995), and the American Mathematical Society’s Leroy Steele Prize (1996), an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He is a fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and the Indian Academy of Sciences. He received his B.Sc. honors degree and M.A. from Madras University, and his Ph.D. from the Indian Statistical Institute in Calcutta.
In awarding the prize, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters cited Professor Varadhan’s crucial work on probability theory. The Academy said of his development of his theory of large deviations that it ìprovides a unifying and efficient method for clarifying a rich variety of phenomena arising in complex stochastic systems, in fields as diverse as quantum field theory, statistical physics, population dynamics, econometrics and finance, and traffic engineering. It has also greatly expanded our ability to use computers to simulate and analyze the occurrence of rare events. Over the last four decades, the theory of large deviations has become a cornerstone of modern probability, both pure and applied.” Other important and outstanding scholarship they cited was his joint work with Daniel Stroock on developing a martingale method for characterizing diffusion processes, and his joint work with Maozheng Guo and George Papanicolau on gradient models, work Professor Varadhan subsequently extended to handle non-gradient models.

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#2
pizza

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Chả muốn mở thêm topic nên mượn tạm chỗ này đăng tin là Smale và Furstenberg nhận giải Wolf năm nay
http://www.wolffund....full.asp?id=155
The world is what it is; men who are nothing , who allow themselves to become nothing , have no place in it !
(Naipaul)
Khi mê tiền chỉ là tiền
Ngộ ra mới biết trong tiền có tâm
Khi mê dâm chỉ là dâm
Ngộ ra mới biết trong dâm có tình
(NBS)

#3
toanhoc

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Wolf chỉ dành cho nhà toán học gốc Do Thái thôi hay cho bất kỳ ai nhỉ ?

#4
Invariant

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Ông Varadhan là người rất dễ chịu, tôi đã từng nghe 2 buổi thuyết trình của ông ấy. Vậy là càng ngày càng nhiều giải thưởng được trao cho các ngành toán ứng dụng hihi. Tôi cũng đang chuyển dần sang làm toán ứng dụng để cuối năm nay về VN làm cho ngân hàng rồi.

#5
Alexi Laiho

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Về làm ngân hàng có áp dụng được String hay DG ko hả Invariant.

#6
Invariant

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String với DG là kỷ niệm đẹp còn thực tế là tôi phải lo cho cuộc sống bản thân mình mà ở VN thì làm gì có nhiều chỗ cho đứa bất tài như tôi loay hoay làm String với DG. Tôi kể thật kỷ niệm buồn là advisor của tôi đã trách tôi không tìm cách độc lập làm một cái gì đó, dù nhỏ nhoi như là tự chứng minh một lemma tự độc lập nghiên cứu từ một hướng nhỏ mà chỉ chăm chăm học cho nhiều môn. May mà trước đây tôi nghe lời bạn khuyên học cả toán kinh tế nên giờ mới có lối thoát.

Bài viết đã được chỉnh sửa nội dung bởi Invariant: 09-04-2007 - 00:31


#7
Alexi Laiho

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thế thì thật là đáng phí tiếc quá, giá mà invariant vẫn tiếp tục làm string, tôi nghĩ việc ra vài lemmata nhỏ cũng không có gì là quá khó với bộ môn string này, vì có người nói đùa rằng mọi thứ trong toán học đều có thể gia tẩm thêm nếm vào lý thuyết dây, tôi hiện toàn làm về những mặt đại số ở đâu đâu, vậy mà vẫn kéo được về string. Không biết đến 1 ngày nào đó string có thành bãi rác của các nhà toán học nữa không thì không biết, ai thích thí nghiệm gì thì vứt vào string 1 tí, vì đằng nào cái trung tâm CERN ở Thụy Sĩ cũng vẫn chưa hoạt động, người ta vẫn chưa kiểm nghiệm được hết, câu thêm tí định lý, bổ đề nào hay tí đấy, nhưng quả thật làm như vậy thì hơi bẩn.

#8
Invariant

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Tôi xin lỗi.




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