Six Oxford Mathematicians are among the 2015 London Mathematical Society prizewinners.
A Polya Prize was awarded to Professor Boris Zilber for his visionary contributions to model theory and its applications.
A Naylor Prize and Lectureship in Applied Mathematics was awarded to Professor Jon Chapman (pictured) for his outstanding contributions to modelling and methods development in applied mathematics.
Whitehead Prizes were awarded to the following:
Efficient implementation of Markov chain Monte Carlo when using an unbiased likelihood estimator
Doucet, A
Pitt, M
Deligiannidis, G
Kohn, R
Biometrika
volume 102
issue 2
295-313
(07 Jun 2015)
Coarse-grained modelling of strong DNA bending I: Thermodynamics and comparison to an experimental "molecular vice"
Harrison, R
Romano, F
Ouldridge, T
Louis, A
Doye, J
(30 Jun 2015)
How rare is the Bullet Cluster (in a ΛCDM universe)?
Kraljic, D
Sarkar, S
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics
volume 1504
issue 4
050-050
(28 Apr 2015)
Gas flow in barred potentials
Sormani, M
Binney, J
Magorrian, J
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
volume 449
issue 3
2421-2435
(21 May 2015)
Thu, 01 Oct 2015
17:00 -
18:00
L1
Dancing Vortices
Étienne Ghys
(Ecole Normale Superieure, Lyons)
Abstract
Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
This lecture has now sold out
There will be a special public lecture at 5pm on October 1 in the Andrew Wiles Building at Oxford University, during the week of the Clay Mathematics Institute’s annual Research Conference. The lecture will be given in English by the French Mathematician Étienne Ghys and will be designed for A-level students (and above). After the lecture, Professor Ghys will be presented with the first Clay Award for the Dissemination of Mathematical Knowledge.
Abstract
Nineteenth century observations of the behaviour of smoke rings and fluid vortices inspired an ingenious but misconceived model of the atom, a flawed proposal that nonetheless gave birth to the modern theory of knots. The chain of ideas has now come full circle with recent theoretical and experimental results on the existence of knotted vortices.
Clay Award for Dissemination
The 17th IMA Leslie Fox Prize in Numerical Analysis has been won by Oxford Mathematician Iain Smears, together with Alex Townsend from MIT.