Mathletes Do It Again!

Good News Everyone!  The Mathletes VI have done it again, this year placing 1st in the Goodlife Toronto Team Marathon.

You can read all the results here

The winning runners were captained by Elio Mazzeo, and included Alex Bloemendal, Nataliya Laptyeva, Robert McCann, Matt Rideout, Didier Smets, and Mitsuru Wilson.  They reached the podium at a time of 3:2:34.6, five minutes less than last year’s run when the team came in second.

On the same day, our graduate student Henning Petzka finished third in the half marathanon at a time of 1:14:48.0.

Thanks to the members of the department who contributed money to help towards the cost of running.

A further article on the event can be found here

Congratulations, Mathletes and Henning, we’re very proud of you all!

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!

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

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!

2011 André-Aisenstadt Prize Goes to One of our Own

Our congratulations go to Professor Joel Kamnitzer, winner of the 2011 André-Aisenstadt Prize.

Professor Joel Kamnitzer

Professor Joel Kamnitzer in Kyoto at RIMS for a conference in May, 2007. Photo courtesy of Professor Dror Bar-Natan.

The André Aisenstadt Mathematics Prize, is awarded to recognize outstanding research achievement by talented, young Canadian mathematician in pure or applied mathematics.  It will be awarded to Dr. Kamnitzer at a ceremony to be held at the CRM on February 18, 2011.

From the official announcement: “Dr. Kamnitzer obtained his Bachelor in Mathematics at the University of Waterloo in 2001 and his PhD at the University of California (Berkeley) in 2005, under the supervision of Allen Knutson. He held a prestigious AIM Five-Year Fellowship as well as post-doctoral postitions at MIT, MSRI, and the University of California (Berkeley). He has been a professor at the University of Toronto since 2008. Dr. Kamnitzer has made substantial and deep contributions to the field of geometric representation theory and related topics.”

The Department wishes to offer Professor Kamnitzer a well deserved congratulations for this prestigious award.

Scholarship Winners and Donors Honoured

On March 31st, staff, faculty, alumni and students gathered in Hart House to celebrate recent scholarship winners and donors.  The Mathematics Department was proud to celebrate this event with a number of outstanding scholarship winners from the department as well as Professor George Elliott, an honoured donor.

Mathematics Scholarship Winners, Donor Professor George Elliott, Chair Kumar Murty and Dean Meric Gertler

Mathematics Scholarship Winners, (far right) Professor George Elliott (Donor), (center right) Professor Kumar Murty (Chair of Mathematics Department) and (center left) Professor Meric Gertler (Dean of Arts and Science)

A Showcase of Undergraduate Research

Article By: Brian Pigott

Each year senior undergraduates in the Math Specialist program at the University of Toronto take a seminar course taught by a senior faculty member. A glance at the course calendar provides almost no information about the course, with the exception of the phrase “Student presentations will be required.”

During the 2009-2010 term, this course was taught by Professor P. Milman who took the presentations to a new level using a new Departmental Wiki page to showcase these innovations. When asked about the purpose of the course Professor Milman said “I wanted to force them to prepare good talks that the other students could absorb.”

Students were required to prepare notes on a topic approved by Professor Milman using Beamer, a LaTeX document class used for preparing slides for presentations. These slides would then be distributed to the audience to be used as an aid for following the seminar. Professor Milman reviewed the notes ahead of time to make sure they were succinctly brief so as not to be read like a book during presentations. This brevity meant that questions played an integral role in the seminars with Professor Milman assigning participation marks to the students based on their level of engagement in the presentations. “If you want to be a mathematician, you have to learn to ask questions,” he said.

The presentation topics themselves were diverse, covering major theorems from differential topology, algebraic geometry, resolution of singularities, and others. For many of the students, this was their first time reading research articles or advanced textbooks. From the perspective of the students, the workload was enormous. Will Pazner, a third-year undergraduate who was registered in the course, said, “I have never worked that hard on a single project before, especially leading up to the presentation date.”

That hard work paid out in the end, though. Janet Li, a fourth-year student in the course, said that she took away a confidence in her ability to prepare and deliver a good presentation. “(Professor) Milman’s dedication really motivated us,” she said. According to Paul Harrison, a fourth-year undergraduate, “It gave me a whole new appreciation for how much work the professors put into preparing lectures.”

Professor Milman put in his share of hours as well, from spending six hours on the phone on a Sunday with Janet Li, to what Will Pazner figured to be twenty hours in his office answering questions. Paul Harrison said that he felt more like a collaborator than a student with Professor Milman.

Altogether there were fifteen presentations given in the course, with one talk being given by a student who wasn’t officially part of the course but who wanted to participate nonetheless.

At the end of the course, each student received a gift from Professor Milman: a CD with a class photo, preliminary materials prepared by Professor Milman, and the slides from each of the presentations.

When asked what it was that he hoped students took away from the course, Professor Milman replied, “I wanted them to see mathematics as a whole (though none of the students chose a topic in analysis) and to experience at least some aspects of the working life of a mathematician.”

For more information or to see the slides from the presentations, please visit the official Wiki page for the course:
http://wiki.math.toronto.edu/TorontoMathWiki/index.php/2009-2010_MAT477_Seminar