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Sylvester Medal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bronze medal awarded by the Royal Society (London)
Award
Sylvester Medal
Refer to caption
James Joseph Sylvester, after whom the award is named
Awarded for"outstanding contributions in the field of mathematics"[1]
Date1901 (1901)
Country United Kingdom
Presented byRoyal Society
Websitehttps://royalsociety.org/medals-and-prizes/sylvester-medal/

TheSylvester Medal is a bronze medal awarded by theRoyal Society for the encouragement of mathematical research, and accompanied by a £1,000 prize.[2] It was named in honour ofJames Joseph Sylvester, theSavilian Professor of Geometry at theUniversity of Oxford in the 1880s, and first awarded in 1901, having been suggested by a group of Sylvester's friends (primarilyRaphael Meldola) after his death in 1897.[3][4] Initially awarded every three years with a prize of around £900,[3][5] the Royal Society have announced that starting in 2009 it will be awarded every two years instead, and is to be aimed at 'early to mid career stage scientist' rather than an established mathematician.[2] The award winner is chosen by the Society's A-side awards committee, which handles physical rather than biological science awards.

As of 2021[update], 45 medals have been awarded, of which all but 10 have been awarded to citizens of the United Kingdom, two to citizens of France and United States, and one medal each has been won by citizens of New Zealand, Germany, Austria, Russia, Italy, Sweden and South Africa. As of 2021[update] three women have won the medal,Mary Cartwright in 1964,Dusa McDuff in 2018, andFrances Kirwan in 2021.

List of recipients

[edit]
List of recipients of the Sylvester Medal
YearPortraitNameNationalityRationaleNotes
1901Black-and-white portrait of Henri PoincaréHenri Poincaré French"For his many and important contributions tomathematical science."[6]
1904Black-and-white photographic portrait of Georg CantorGeorg Cantor German"For his researches in the theories of aggregates and of sets of points of the arithmetic continuum, oftransfinite numbers, andFourier's series."[7]
1907Black-and-white photographic portrait of Wilhelm WirtingerWilhelm Wirtinger Austrian"For his contributions to the general theory of functions."[8]
1910Black-and-white photographic portrait of Henry Frederick BakerHenry Frederick Baker British"For his researches in the theory ofAbelian functions and for his edition of Sylvester's 'Collected Works'"[9]
1913Black-and-white photographic portrait of James Whitbread Lee GlaisherJames Whitbread Lee Glaisher British"For his mathematical researches."[10]
1916Black-and-white photographic portrait of Jean Gaston DarbouxJean Gaston Darboux French"For his contributions to mathematical science."[11]
1919Black-and-white photographic portrait of Percy MacMahonPercy Alexander MacMahon British"For his researches inpure mathematics, especially in connection with thepartition of numbers and analysis"[12]
1922Black-and-white photographic portrait of Tullio Levi-CivitaTullio Levi-Civita Italian"For his researches ingeometry and mechanics"[13][14]
1925Full body portrait of Alfred North WhiteheadAlfred North Whitehead British"For his researches on the foundations of mathematics"[15]
1928alt-Black-and-white photographic portrait of William Henry YoungWilliam Henry Young British"For his contributions to the theory of functions of a real variable"[16][17]
1931Portrait of Edmund Taylor WhittakerEdmund Taylor Whittaker British"For his original contributions to both pure andapplied mathematics"[18]
1934Bertrand Russell British"For his distinguished work on the foundations of mathematics"[19][20]
1937Black-and-white portrait of Augustus Edward Hough LoveAugustus Edward Hough Love British"In recognition of his researches in classicalmathematical physics"[21]
1940Black-and0white portrait of Godfrey Harold HardyGodfrey Harold Hardy British"For his important contributions to many branches of pure mathematics."[22]
1943Black-and-white photographic portrait of John Edensor LittlewoodJohn Edensor Littlewood British"For his mathematical discoveries and supreme insight in the analytical theory of numbers."[23]
1946George Neville Watson British"For his distinguished contributions to pure mathematics in the field of mathematical analysis and in particular for his work onasymptotic expansion and on general transforms.[24]
1949Portrait of Louis Joel MordellLouis Joel Mordell British"For his distinguished researches in pure mathematics, especially for his discoveries in thetheory of numbers."[25]
1952Abram Samoilovitch Besicovitch Russian"For his outstanding work onalmost-periodic functions, the theory of measure and integration and many other topics of theory of functions."[26]
1955Edward Charles Titchmarsh British"For his distinguished researches on theRiemann zeta-function, analytical theory of numbers,Fourier analysis, andeigenfunction expansions."[27]
1958Black-and-white photographic portrait of Max NewmanMax Newman British"for his distinguished contributions tocombinatory topology,Boolean algebras andmathematical logic."[28]
1961Full body portrait of Philip HallPhilip Hall British"For his distinguished researches inalgebra."[29]
1964Black-and-white photographic portrait of Mary CartwrightMary Cartwright British"For her distinguished contributions to analysis and the theory of functions of areal andcomplex variable."[30]
1967Black-and-white photographic portrait of Harold DavenportHarold Davenport British"For his many distinguished contributions to the theory of numbers."[31]
1970George Frederick James Temple British"For his many distinguished contributions to applied mathematics, especially in his work ondistribution theory."[32]
1973John William Scott Cassels British"For his numerous important contributions to the theory of numbers."[33]
1976Black-and-white photographic portrait of David George KenallDavid George Kendall British"For his many distinguished contributions toprobability theory and its applications."[34]
1979Black-and-white portrait of Graham HigmanGraham Higman British"For his distinguished and profoundly influential contributions to the theory of finite and infinite groups.[35]
1982Black-and-white photographic portrait of John Frank AdamsJohn Frank Adams British"For his solution of several outstanding problems ofalgebraic topology and of the methods he invented for this purpose which have proved of prime importance in the theory of the subject."[36]
1985Photographic portrait of John Griggs ThompsonJohn Griggs Thompson American"For his fundamental contributions leading to the complete classification of all finitesimple groups."[37]
1988Photographic portrait of Charles T. C. WallCharles T. C. Wall British"For his contributions to the topology of manifolds and related topics in algebra and geometry."[38][39]
1991Klaus Friedrich Roth British"For his many contributions to number theory and in particularhis solution of the famous problem concerningapproximating algebraic numbers by rationals."[40][41]
1994Peter Whittle New Zealander"For his major distinctive contributions to time series analysis, tooptimisation theory, and to a wide range of topics inapplied probability theory and the mathematics of operational research."[42][43]
1997Photographic portrait of Harold Scott MacDonald CoxeterHarold Scott MacDonald Coxeter British
Canadian
"For his achievements in geometry, notablyprojective geometry,non-euclidean geometry and the analysis of spatial shapes and patterns, and for his substantial contributions to practical group-theory which pervade much modern mathematics."[44][45]
2000Photographic portrait of Nigel James HitchinNigel James Hitchin British"For his important contributions to many parts ofdifferential geometry combining this withcomplex geometry, integrable systems andmathematical physics interweaving the most modern ideas with the classical literature."[46]
2003Photograph of Lennart CarlesonLennart Carleson Swedish"For his deep and fundamental contributions to mathematics in the field of analysis and complex dynamics."[47]
2006Photograph of Peter Swinnerton-DyerPeter Swinnerton-Dyer British"For his fundamental work inarithmetic geometry and his many contributions to the theory ofordinary differential equations."[48][49]
2009Portrait of John M. BallJohn M. Ball British"For his seminal work in mechanics andnonlinear analysis and his encouragement of mathematical research in developing countries."[50][51]
2010Photograph of Graeme SegalGraeme Segal British"For his highly influential and elegant work on the development of topology, geometry andquantum field theory, bridging the gap between physics and pure mathematics."[52]
2012John Francis Toland British
Irish
"For his original theorems and remarkable discoveries innonlinear partial differential equations, including applications to water waves."[53][54]
2014Photograph of Ben GreenBen Green British"For his famous result onprimes in arithmetic progression, and his subsequent proofs of a number of spectacular theorems over the last five to ten years."[55][56]
2016Photograph of Timothy GowersTimothy Gowers British"For his groundbreaking results in the theory ofBanach spaces, purecombinatorics, andadditive number theory."[57]
2018Photograph of Dusa McDuffDusa McDuff British"For leading the development of the new field ofsymplectic geometry and topology."[58]
2019Photograph of Peter SarnakPeter Sarnak American
South African
"For transformational contributions across number theory, combinatorics, analysis and geometry."[59]
2020Photograph of Bryan John BirchBryan John Birch British"For driving the theory of elliptic curves, through theBirch-Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture and the theory ofHeegner points."[60]
2021Photograph of Frances KirwanFrances Kirwan British"For her research on quotients in algebraic geometry, including links with symplectic geometry and topology, which has had many applications."[61]
2022Black-and-white photographic portrait of Roger Heath-BrownRoger Heath-Brown British"For his many important contributions to the study ofprime numbers and solutions to equations in integers."[62]
2023Photograph of Miles ReidMiles Reid British"For his exceptionally creative research and fundamental insights into higher-dimensional algebraic geometry, in particular the minimal model program for 3-folds, and for untiring work for the community of algebraic geometers."[63]
2024Photograph of Professor_Philip_Kumar_Maini_FRS.jpgPhilip Maini British"For his contributions to mathematical biology, especially the interdisciplinary modelling of biomedical phenomena and systems."[64]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  64. ^Sylvester Medal 2024
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