Английская Википедия:Aisenstadt Prize
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Шаблон:Short description The André Aisenstadt Prize recognizes a young Canadian mathematician's outstanding achievement in pure or applied mathematics.[1]
It has been awarded annually since 1992 (except in 1994, when no prize was given) by the Centre de Recherches Mathématiques at the University of Montreal. The prize consists of a $3,000 award and a medal. It is named after Шаблон:Interlanguage link.
Prize Winners
Source: CRM, University of Montreal
- 2021 Giulio Tiozzo (University of Toronto) and Tristan C. Collins (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- 2020 Robert Haslhofer (University of Toronto) and Egor Shelukhin (Université de Montréal)
- 2019 Yaniv Plan (University of British Columbia)
- 2018 Benjamin Rossman (University of Toronto)
- 2017 Jacob Tsimerman (University of Toronto)
- 2016 Anne Broadbent (University of Ottawa)
- 2015 Louis-Pierre Arguin (University of Montréal and the City University of New York - Baruch College and Graduate Center)
- 2014 Sabin Cautis of the University of British Columbia[2]
- 2013 Spyros Alexakis of the University of Toronto[3]
- 2012 Marco Gualtieri of the University of Toronto and Young-Heon Kim of the University of British Columbia
- 2011 Joel Kamnitzer of the University of Toronto[4]
- 2010 Omer Angel of the University of British Columbia
- 2009 Valentin Blomer of the University of Toronto
- 2008 József Solymosi of the University of British Columbia and Jonathan Taylor of the University of Montreal.
- 2007 Greg Smith of Queen's University[5] and Alexander Holroyd of the University of British Columbia.
- 2006 Iosif Polterovich of the University of Montreal[6] and Tai-Peng Tsai of the University of British Columbia
- 2005 Ravi Vakil of Stanford University
- 2004 Vinayak Vatsal of the University of British Columbia
- 2003 Alexander Brudnyi of the University of Calgary
- 2002 Jinyi Chen of the University of British Columbia
- 2001 Eckhard Meinrenken of the University of Toronto[7]
- 2000 Changfeng Gui of the University of Connecticut
- 1999 John Toth of McGill University
- 1998 Boris A. Khesin of the University of Toronto
- 1997 Lisa Jeffrey and Henri Darmon of McGill University
- 1996 Adrian Stephen Lewis of Cornell University[8]
- 1995 Nigel Higson of Pennsylvania State University and Michael J. Ward of the University of British Columbia
- 1994 No award
- 1993 Ian F. Putnam of the University of Victoria
- 1992 Niky Kamran of McGill University
See also
References