Public News

25th British Topology Meeting, Merton College 6-8 September 2010

This year the British Topology Meeting will take place in Merton College, Oxford, from Monday 6th to Wednesday 8th of September 2010. We hope that the meeting will be an opportunity to reinforce the strengths of the community of British topology and we aim to represent many of the facets of current topology. For more information please see the BTM webpage.

The event is being supported by the London Mathematical Society and Merton College.

Organisers: Jeffrey Giansiracusa ( Jeffrey [dot] Giansiracusa [-at-] maths [dot] ox [dot] ac [dot] uk ) and Oscar Randal-Williams ( Oscar [dot] Randal-Williams [-at-] maths [dot] ox [dot] ac [dot] uk )

Nomura funding renewed

Nomura International plc has recently renewed its sponsorship with an uplifted funding for the Nomura Centre for Mathematical Finance (NCMF) at the Mathematical Institute, for another five years, starting from April 2010. Xunyu Zhou, Nomura Professor of Mathematical Finance and the Director of NCMF, says, We are very pleased with the continuing partnership between Oxford and Nomura, which has become exemplary for academic-industry collaborations. It is also a great vote of confidence from Nomura in the rapidly expanding Mathematical Finance group in Oxford. The new funding will support among others the Nomura Chair, 2 Nomura Research Fellows, the annual Nomura Lecture, the weekly Nomura Seminar series, and academic visitors to the Centre.

Marcus du Sautoy to receive 2010 JPBM Communications Award

The 2010 JPBM Communications Award is made to Marcus du Sautoy, Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science and Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford.

The JPBM (Joint Policy Board for Mathematics) is an umbrella organization for four major American mathematical societies: the American Mathematical Society, the American Statistical Association, the Mathematical Association of America, and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. The JPBM Communications Award was established in 1988 to recognize journalists, mathematicians, and others who, on a sustained basis, bring mathematical ideas and information to non-mathematical audiences. The award recognizes a significant accumulated contribution to the public understanding of mathematics.

For the past fifteen years Professor du Sautoy has complemented his love of mathematical discovery with a passion for communicating mathematics to a broad public. He has reached hundreds of thousands through his books, television shows, and hundreds of articles and appearances in newspapers, magazines, television, and radio. His 2003 book on the Riemann Hypothesis, entitled "The Music of the Primes", is a best-seller which has been translated into 10 languages. In his 2008 book "Symmetry: A Journey into the Patterns of Nature", du Sautoy guides the reader through groups and symmetry, from Babylonia to moonshine theory, while at the same time giving an engaging glimpse into mathematicians' minds. His four part television, the Story of Maths, presents a fascinating look at the development of mathematics from the design of the pyramids in Egypt to Perelman's proof of Poincaré's Conjecture.

Whether it is talking about Beckham's choice of number on a sports radio program, explaining the work of the Abel prize winner on Norwegian television, writing a weekly math column for the London Times, hosting a television game show based on math puzzles, or delivering the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, Marcus du Sautoy invariably seizes opportunities to make mathematics more accessible and more appealing.

Marcus du Sautoy to receive an OBE

Congratulations to Marcus du Sautoy on the award of an OBE for services to Science.

New Years Honours List 2010

Nick Trefethen to be next SIAM president

Nick Trefethen, Professor of Numerical Analysis, has been announced as the President-Elect of SIAM.

Cornelia Drutu Badea awarded the title Professor of Mathematics

Congratulations to Cornelia Drutu Badea on the award of the title Professor of Mathematics.

Endre Süli elected Foreign Member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

Endre Süli was elected Foreign Member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts at the General Assembly of the Academy, which was held in Belgrade on 5th November.

The Academy, founded as the Serbian Royal Academy in 1886, is the Serbian national academy. It is the highest academic institution in the country, whose members are elected triennially.

This year's list of new Foreign Members also includes the President of the Czech Republic, the economist, Vaclav Klaus; the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt; and the Swedish Nobel Laureate, neurophysiologist, Torsten Wiesel.

Martin Taylor to be next Warden of Merton College

Merton College has announced its intention to elect Professor Sir Martin Taylor, FRS, to the Wardenship from 1 October 2010.

Further details are available.

Simonyi Professor Inaugural Lecture - Mathematics: Navigating Nature's Dark Labyrinth

Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science Marcus Du Sautoy will deliver his Inaugural Lecture on Wednesday 25 November, at 5.30 p.m. A reception will follow the lecture.

Venue: Examination Schools
75-81 High Street, Oxford, OX1 4BG
Lecture commences at 5.30 p.m.
Doors open 4.30pm
5.30-6.30pm: lecture
6.30-7.30pm: reception

NB: This event is free, but tickets are required. Please register your attendance and print out a free ticket at http://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/inauguralsimonyi. You will need to specify the number of people on your party, and print out a free ticket for each of them. No one will be admitted to the lecture without a ticket.

Galileo once wrote: "The universe cannot be read until we have learnt the language in which it is written. It is written in mathematical language and the letters are triangles, circles and other geometric figures without which means it is humanly impossible to comprehend a single word." Mathematics is the key to many of the greatest scientific and technological advances made throughout the ages. For artists too, mathematics underpins many steps in the creative process. From the tiles in the Alhambra to Bach's Goldberg Variations, there are mathematical structures hiding behind these great works of art. In this lecture, I shall explore the power of this mathematical language to help navigate Nature's dark labyrinth and to take us into new worlds we could hardly hope to conceive of.

Andrew Wiles to move to Oxford as Royal Society Professor in 2011

Sir Andrew Wiles will be joining the Mathematical Instiute as a Royal Society 2010 Anniversary Research Professor.

Sir Andrew Wiles specialises in number theory and became famous for proving Fermat’s Last Theorem. The Theorem was first conjectured in 1637 but all attempts to solve it failed until Sir Andrew Wiles published his general proof in 1995 to international acclaim. His achievement was popularised in Simon Singh’s book Fermat’s Last Theorem and BBC Two’s Horizon. He will be moving from Princeton University to take up his new Royal Society Professorship at Oxford’s Mathematical Institute and Merton College in 2011.

For further information see this Oxford University news item

Syndicate content