Chair Wins Inventor of the Year Award

Our congratulations go to Professor Kumar Murty, Chair of the Mathematics Department, for being honoured by the Innovations and Partnerships Office and receiving the inaugural “Inventor of the Year” award in Engineering and Physical Sciences.

This award is given to ”recognize University of Toronto inventors or teams of inventors who have made a significant contribution to the University of Toronto’s innovation agenda”.  Further information on the award can be found on the Innovations and Partnership Office website.

From the Bulletin: “Murty and research associate Nikolai Volkovs have created a data integrity algorithm that represents a breakthrough in terms of its speed and its large internal state space. It is able to authenticate data at wire speeds and can be customized for each individual user. Moreover, its stream-based architecture opens up new possibilities for authenticating data on the fly as well as building higher integrity systems for greater security and reliability. The invention has been patented and a spin-off company, Prata Technologies, was founded in 2007. Murty is also working with General Electric to apply this novel authentication technology in the smart grid.”

Further information on the award and other recipients can be found at: http://www.news.utoronto.ca/campus-news/inventor-of-the-year-winners-list-2011.html

DeLury TA Award Winners Announced

We are happy to announce that this year’s winners of the Daniel B. DeLury Teaching Awards for graduate students in mathematics are:

  • Karene Chu
  • Bruce Fontaine
  • Henning Petzka

The selection committee consisted of Catherine Sulem and Abe Igelfeld.

Nominations were made by course instructors and undergraduate students.

The selection committee received many favourable comments about our TA’s as fine work is being done by many of our teaching assistants, and we can take pride in their work.

Congratulations Karene, Bruce and Henning!

Cressy Award to Math Union Co-President

This year Sergio DaSilva, co-president of the Math Union this year was one of 15 winners of a Cressy Award.

The awards are given for outstanding volunteer service to the faculty, their departments and the university and for their contributions towards enhancing student experience.

Photos of the Award winner luncheon with Dean of Arts and Science, Meric Gertler, can be found here

Congratulations to Sergio and all the other award winners!

Professor Braverman Wins Sloan

Professor Mark Braverman of the Departments of Mathematics and Computer Science has won one of this year’s prestigious Sloan Fellowship awards.

The full list of winners can be found here

Our hearty congratulations go to Professor Braverman on this great accomplishment!

AMS Centennial Research Fellowship for 2011-12 Winner

Professor George Elliott’s former PhD student, Andrew Toms, now at Purdue, has been awarded this year’s AMS Centennial Research Fellowship.

The Purdue announcement can be found here.

Alumni Awarded Artin Junior Prize

Dr. Hrant Hakobyan, a University of Toronto, Department of Mathematics postdoctoral fellow from July 2007 to June 2010 with Professor Ilia Binder, has been awarded the 2010 Emil Artin Junior Prize in Mathematics.
An excerpt from the AMS notices posting: Hrant Hakobyan of Kansas State University has been awarded the 2010 Emil Artin Junior Prize in Mathematics.

Established in 2001, the Emil Artin Junior Prize in Mathematics carries a cash award of US$1,000 and is presented usually every year to a student or former student of an Armenian university under the age of thirty-five for outstanding contributions to algebra, geometry, topology, and number theory—the fields in which Emil Artin made major contributions”

The full article can be found here: http://www.ams.org/notices/201011/rtx101101481p.pdf

Our congratulations go to Dr. Hakobyan on this accomplishment.

2010 Malcolm Slingsby Robertson Prize Awarded

Congratulations go to Dr. Ian Zwiers as the winner of this year’s Malcolm Slingsby Robertson prize.  This prize is awarded to a graduating PhD student who has demonstrated excellence in research.

Dr. Zwiers’ research was in the area of Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations under the supervision of Professor James Colliander.  His thesis was entitled “Standing ring blowup solutions for the cubic nonlinear Schrödinger equation”.

Dr. Zwiers’ is now a postdoctoral fellow at the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences in Vancouver.

Our congratulations go to Dr. Zwiers and we wish him all the best in his future endeavors.