Azrieli Fellowship Prize

Congratulations go to Pinaki Mondal, a postdoctoral fellow with the Department, for being award one of this year’s Azrieli Fellowship Prizes.

From their website:  The Azrieli Foundation is a Canadian philanthropic organization that supports a wide range of initiatives and programs in the fields of education, architecture and design, Jewish community, Holocaust commemoration and education, scientific and medical research, and the arts.

From their poster: The Azrieli Fellows Program welcomes the best and brightest postdoctoral scholars who wish to undertake postdoctoral research in Israel in any field of study. … The fellowships are awarded on the basis of academic excellence.  Candidates are assessed on their potential to make cutting-edge contributions to their respective fields.

The full poster can be found here

Our congratulations go to Pinaki who joins other talented students for their prestigious prize.

Putnam 2011

We are pleased to announce the Putnam results for 2011.

Our warmest congratulations go to Jialin Song, who received an honorable mention and ranked 55 in North America, and among the top two contestants in Canada.

The University of Toronto team consisting of Alexander Remorov, Jonathan Zung, and Keith Ng ranked eleventh. All of the team members were ranked among 120-180 best in North America.

The top five teams in order were Harvard, Carnegie-Mellon, Caltech, Stanford and MIT. Harvey Mudd College, University of British Columbia, University of Michigan, University of Virginia, and Williams College placed among the top ten.

All told, 4440 students from 572 institutions competed.

Full results and the announcement can be found here

2 More Sloans!

The results of this year’s Sloan Research Fellowships competition have just been announced and we are delighted that two of our own faculty have been awarded this prestigious award once again this year.

We are pleased to congratulate Professors Joel Kamnitzer and Florian Herzig on this great accomplishment.

From the Sloan website: The Sloan Research Fellowships seek to stimulate fundamental research by early-career scientists and scholars of outstanding promise.  These two-year fellowships are awarded yearly to 118 researchers in recognition of distinguished performance and a unique potential to make substantial contributions to their field.

Of the 118 fellowships given out this year only 7 went to Canadian Universities with 3 of them to the University of Toronto and 2 of those to the Math Department.  The other Canadian Universities honoured were the University of Victoria, Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia.

Further details about the fellowship, including the full list of recipients, can be found here.

2012 CRM-Fields-PIMS Prize Winner

Congratulations go out to Professor Stevo Todorcevic who has been awarded the 2012 CRM-Fields-PIMS Prize which recognizes exceptional achievement in the mathematical sciences.

The prize is jointly administered by the three Canadian math research institutes: the Centre de Recherches Mathematiques (CRM), the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences (PIMS) and the Fields Institute.

Professor Todorcevic was recognized for the “striking originality and technical brilliance of his work”.

You can view the various press releases here:

Further information about the prize can be found here.

We extend Professor Todorcevic a hearty congratulations on this wonderful recognition!

 

Faculty Member Awarded Order of Civil Merit

From the UofT Press Bulletin:

Luis Seco, a mathematics professor and director of RiskLab at the University of Toronto, was given the Caballero de la Orden del Merito Civil award today. Seco is honoured for his application of mathematics to foresee economic cycles, a model that has been useful in a number of other countries, including Spain.

Francisco Pascual de la Parte, the Consul General of Spain, spoke of how proud he was and how positive the ministry of foreign affairs was to present the medal and certificate to Seco at the Fields Institute this afternoon.

Seco says that he’s just as proud and excited for the award and what it represents. “It’s recognition of what we’re all made of, and in my days, it’s U of T, the Fields Institute, the RiskLab, it’s my company Sigma, it’s all the things that contribute to make you who you are. To me that’s the best part of this, it’s the recognition of all the different pieces that came together to make something good.

“I’m happy U of T makes it possible for these things to happen. It speaks to the innovation that happens here.”

Established in 1926 by King Don Alfonso XIII of Spain, the Caballero de la Orden del Merito Civil award recognizes the extraordinary service by foreign and domestic citizens in favour of the Spanish nation. The award is proposed by the Spanish Foreign Affairs Minister, and is given in the name of the King of Spain, Don Juan Carlos I.

Seco founded RiskLab at U of T in 1996 as part of an international network devoted to conducting university-industry research initiatives in the mathematical sciences for risk management.  RiskLab provides the financial industry with an opportunity to address its needs through cutting-edge research and through industry-sponsored projects. It also enables faculty, postdoctoral fellows and students to interact with financial institutions. In 2007, he together with Risklab’s sponsor Algorithmics, received the Synergy Award from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada for research to create financial software that identifies and manages the risks involved in complex financial instruments. Seco is also president and CEO of Sigma Analysis & Management Ltd.

The full article (including pictures) can be found here

FRSC Honours One of Our Own

On September 7, 2011 the Royal Society of Canada named it’s newest members and Professor Stephen Kudla of the Math Department made the list.

Professor Kulda was honoured in the Mathematical and Physical Sciences Division

From the RSC’s official media bulletin:

  • Stephen S. Kudla is an international leader in the field of automorphic forms and arithmetic geometry.  His research continues the development of the arithmetic theory of quadratic forms and theta functions, a subject that has deep historical roots.  His work has had a wide impact on the study of special values of L-functions and their derivatives, a topic of central importance in modern number theory.

Professor Kudla was one of 78 new fellows and one of 12 from the University of Toronto.

More information on the prestigious honour and this year’s list and media release can be found here.

Rollo Davidson Prize Announced

Our congratulations go to Assistant Professor Gábor Pete for being announced as this year’s Rollo Davidson Prize winner.

Along with Dr. Chritophe Garban from Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon this year’s Rollo Davidson prize was jointly award for “striking and important new results for planar random processes, particularly in establishing a theory of noise sensitivity for critical percolation and the application of this theory to dynamical percolation.”

More information on the award, including past winners, can be found at the official Rollo Davidson Trust page.

Our congratulations go to them both!