Pi Day Thursday and the March Break Math Camp

Today is Pi Day, and as part of the March Break Math Camp that the department is running the students are celebrating this fascinating and mysterious number with activities, investigations and, of course, pie.  Apple pie to be exact.  We’ve even been featured in a Toronto Star article about the day.

The March Break Math Camp, open to students in Grades 4 – 10, has seen 57 students participate in a week of hands-on, interactive activities designed to introduce and excite them about the various fields of mathematics.  From number theory to geometry to building geodesic domes and optimizations.   The camp has also drawn from a partnership with the Canadian Math Kangaroo Competition to provide students with competition based problems and content.  Today they celebrate Pi with discussions of circles and the fascinating number ratio itself.

In addition, the camp will see guest speakers from the Department of Mathematics give talks to students on optimization, Mobius strips, origami and math, the board game Blockus and how Google works.

Grade 9/10 students building Geodesic Domes

Grade 7/8 students built circles from string, meter sticks and math!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So Happy Pi Day to you all from the students at the March Break Math Camp!

Department Highlighted in Fields Notes

For it’s involvement in the Mathematics Pavilion at this year’s Science Rendezvous the department received a nod and a two page spread of photos from this year’s event.

The full article can be found here (starting on page 12)

For the past three years the Math department has had an ever growing pavilion at Science Rendezvous.  This near exponential growth has been in good part due to the efforts of the Fields Institute and their generous usage of space and resources.  This year’s event saw over 300 visitors and allowed them to freely tour the Fields Institute and be up close and personal with a wide variety of math activities and personel.

We look forward to next year’s event and the continued growth of this wonderful pavilion.

Math Kangaroo Featured in CMS Notes

The CMS notes recently ran an article written by the board members of the Canadian Math Kangaroo competition detailing the potential competition like this have for popularizing the field of Mathematics for our up-and-coming mathematicians.

The article provides an overview of the competition, sample problems and background on the competition.  It also talks of how the competition helps to involve and inspire students to be involved with mathematics in a context outside the typical classroom.

The full article can be found here (starting on page 8 )

This year the GTA section of the competition saw over 900 students participate across the three UofT campuses (UTSC, UTM and St George) and had over 50 staff and students volunteer to make it a success.

More information on UofT’s involvement with the competition can be found here

Canadian IMO Team Strikes Gold…

… and Silver and Bronze!

This year’s Canadian IMO (International Mathematics Olympiad) had a clean-up year for medals at this year’s competition.  The team, coached by Lindsey Shorser (an instructor with the Math Department), along with David Arthur, Ralph Furmaniak, and Alex Fink, won 6 medals (one for each of the team members).  In addition, the team leader was Jacob Tsimerman, who was a former U of T undergraduate math specialist.

In total the Canadian team walked away with 3 gold medals, 1 silver and 2 bronze medals.  This success ranks Canada 5th in the world out of 100 countries which is the best standing Canada has received since it started participating in the IMO in 1981.

The full story, complete with a picture of the team and a breakdown of the medals, can be found here

Further Stories

Our congratulations go to the team, its leaders and its coaches!  Great work!

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.

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

Putnam Players Profiled

UofT Magazine recently sat down with a few of our past and current Putnam writers to profile the history of this competition and provide some “food for thought” for those interested in finding out about the types of questions asked.

The article can be found here

This year’s Putnam competition was written on Saturday, December 3rd by a group of 35 students.  The results of this competition will be announced sometime in April 2012.