Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize

The Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize is an annual prize in mathematics, awarded by the Association for Women in Mathematics to honor outstanding research by a female mathematician who has recently earned tenure. The prize funds the winner to spend a semester as a visiting faculty member at Cornell University, working with the faculty there and presenting a distinguished lecture on their research.[1][2] It is named after Ruth I. Michler (1967–2000), a German-American mathematician born at Cornell, who died in a road accident at the age of 33.[3]

The award was first offered in 2007. Its winners and their lectures have included:[1][2][4]

  • Rebecca Goldin (2007), "The Geometry of Polygons"
  • Irina Mitrea (2008), "Boundary-Value Problems for Higher-Order Elliptic Operators"
  • Maria Gordina (2009), "Lie's Third Theorem in Infinite Dimensions"
  • Patricia Hersh (2010), "Regular CS Complexes, Total Positivity and Bruhat Order"
  • Anna Mazzucato (2011), "The Analysis of Incompressible Fluids at High Reynolds Numbers"
  • Ling Long (2012), "Atkin and Swinnerton-Dyer Congruences"
  • Megumi Harada (2013), "Newton-Okounkov bodies and integrable systems"
  • Sema Salur (2014), "Manifolds with G2 structure and beyond"
  • Malabika Pramanik (2015), "Needles, Bushes, Hairbrushes, and Polynomials"
  • Pallavi Dani (2016), "Large-scale geometry of right-angled Coxeter groups"
  • Julia Gordon (2017), "Wilkie's theorem and (ineffective) uniform bounds"
  • Julie Bergner (2018), "2-Segal structures and the Waldhausen S-construction"
  • Anna Skripka (2019), "Untangling noncommutativity with operator integrals"
  • Shabnam Akhtari (2021), "Representation of integers by binary forms"
  • Emily E. Witt (2022), "Local cohomology: An algebraic tool capturing geometric data"
  • Lauren M. Childs (2023)
  • Alexandra Seceleanu (2024)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prizes, Association for Women in Mathematics, retrieved 2019-10-26
  2. ^ a b The Ruth I Michler Memorial Prize of the AWM, MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, retrieved 2019-10-26
  3. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Ruth Ingrid Michler", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  4. ^ Michler Lecture Series, Cornell University, retrieved 2019-10-26. See also Department of Mathematics Michler Lecture Series - Julie Bergner, The University of Virginia. Talk Title: 2-Segal structures and the Waldhausen S-construction, Cornell University, retrieved 2019-10-26