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New Horizons in Mathematics Prize

Le New Horizons in Mathematics Prize est dĂ©cernĂ© depuis 2016 chaque annĂ©e Ă  plusieurs jeunes chercheurs ; ce prix est dotĂ© de 100 000 $ et s'adresse Ă  des jeunes mathĂ©maticiens ayant dĂ©jĂ  accompli un travail important. Les prix sont portĂ©s par un fond de la fondation Mark Zuckerberg Ă  la Silicon Valley Community Foundation, et par un fond de la Milner Foundation.

Lauréats

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020[2]

2021

  • Bhargav Bhatt – « For outstanding work in commutative algebra and arithmetic algebraic geometry, particularly on the development of p-adic cohomology theories. »
  • Alexandre Logounov – « For novel techniques to study solutions to elliptic equations, and their application to long-standing problems in nodal geometry. »
  • Song Sun – « For many groundbreaking contributions to complex differential geometry, including existence results for Kähler–Einstein metrics and connections with moduli questions and singularities. »

2022

  • Aaron Brown et Sebastian Hurtado Salazar – Pour leurs contributions Ă  la preuve de la conjecture de Zimmer.
  • Jack Thorne – « For transformative contributions to diverse areas of algebraic number theory, and in particular for the proof, in collaboration with James Newton, of the automorphy of all symmetric powers of a holomorphic modular newform. »
  • Jacob Tsimerman – « For outstanding work in analytic number theory and arithmetic geometry, including breakthroughs on the André–Oort and Griffiths conjectures. »

2023

  • Ana Caraiani, Imperial College London et University of Bonn — « for diverse transformative contributions to the Langlands program, and in particular for work with Peter Scholze on the Hodge-Tate period map for Shimura varieties and its applications. »
  • Ronen Eldan (en), Institut Weizmann et Microsoft Research — « for the creation of the stochastic localization method, that has led to significant progress in several open problems in high-dimensional geometry and probability, including Jean Bourgain's slicing problem and the KLS conjecture. »
  • James Maynard, Oxford University et Institute for Advanced Study — « for multiple contributions to analytic number theory, and in particular to the distribution of prime numbers ».

Voir aussi

Notes et références

Lien externe

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