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.

Fall 2010 Newsletter is HERE

Click below to access your downloadable copy of the Department of Mathematics Fall 2010 Newsletter.

http://www.math.toronto.edu/cms/newsletters-3/

Mathletes Do It Again!

Congratulations to the Mathletes + 15 mod 7 who once again participated in the Toronto Marathon on Sunday, October 17th.  The team, consisting of Geordie Richards, Elio Mazzeo, Nataliya Laptyeva, Mitsuru Wilson, Matt Rideout, Bethany Springer, Marco Gualtieri and Artem Dudko, placed third out of 98 teams this year.

The team, and their picture, was featured in the UofT Bulletin.  Click here for that story:  http://www.news.utoronto.ca/bulletin/EBULL/ebulletin10-21-10.html

The plaque and medal are currently on display in the main math office.

Our congratulations go to this well deserving team of Mathletes!

Student Poster is a Rising Star Winner

Sergio Da Silva with his award winning poster

Undergraduate student Sergio DaSilva’s poster entitled “Oda’s Strong Factorization Conjecture and its Implications in Toric Geometry” has won the “Most Outstanding Poster” prize at this years Rising Stars Conference.  The poster was featured in the computational science section which covers areas such as math and computer science.  The poster was marked by four judges on aspects of the poster itself, the student’s presentation and the research covered.

Sergio’s subject area is algebraic geometry and deals more specifically with birational geometry. His poster was based on work that he did last summer at UBC with Dr.Kalle Karu through an NSERC USRA. The original results will be published in the Tohoku Mathematical Journal.

When asked about what he thought about the conference in general Sergio had the following to say: “I thought RSR 2010 was a great experience, and I would highly recommend it to students who are thinking about applying in the future. Posters are not a conventional means for math presentations, and it was challenging and new to explain my research to people from other fields. Professors often travel to other locations to discuss their research, and this competition provides a similar platform for undergraduates to present their work.”

More information on the Rising Stars Competition can be found here: http://www.risingstars.ubc.ca/

Congratulations go to Sergio!

Faculty Member Wins Prestigious André Lichnerowicz Prize

Congratulations go to Professor Marco Gualtieri.  He, along with Xiang Tang, an assistant professor at Washington University in Saint Louis, were awarded this year’s prestigious André Lichnerowicz prize.  The prize was awarded at a ceremony on July 26, 2010 at the IMPA in Rio de Janeiro.

From the ceremony:  ”the André Lichnerowicz prize was established in 2008 to be awarded for notable contributions to Poisson geometry. The prize is to be awarded every two years at the “International Conference on Poisson Geometry in Mathematics and Physics” to researchers who had completed their doctorates at most eight years before the year of the Conference.

The prize was named in memory of André Lichnerowicz (1915-1998) whose work was fundamental in establishing Poisson geometry as a branch of mathematics. In 2010, it was awarded by a jury composed of the members of the scientific and advisory committees of the biennial Poisson Conference.

Professor Marco Gualtieri received his doctorate at Oxford University in 2004 under the direction of Nigel Hitchin. After holding post-doctoral positions at MSRI, Berkeley, at the Fields Institute in Toronto and at MIT, he joined the Department of Mathematics at the University of Toronto, where he is an assistant professor. His pioneering work on generalized geometry has been the source of inspiration for many related studies. Already in his Ph. D. thesis he developed the basic structure theory of generalized complex geometry as well as of generalized Kahler geometry. Since then he has been studying generalized geometry and its applications to physics independently and in collaboration with Gil Cavalcanti, Henrique Bursztyn and Vestislav Apostolov. More recently, he has studied D-branes in generalized complex manifolds and their relation to noncommutative geometry, as well as further generalizations of classical geometries.”

Our sincere congratulations go to Professor Gualtieri on this well deserved achievement!

UTSC Mathematics Professor Wins Prestigious Award

Professor Ragnar-Olaf Buchweitz (photo courtesy of Ken Jones)

Professor Ragnar-Olaf Buchweitz was recently awarded the prestigious Humboldt Research Award from Germany.

From their website: “The award is granted in recognition of a researcher’s entire achievements to date to academics whose fundamental discoveries, new theories, or insights have had a significant impact on their own discipline and who are expected to continue producing cutting-edge achievements in the future.”

In a recent article for the University of Toronto’s ‘the Bulletin’ Professor Buchweitz was quoted as saying “I was delighted that I was awarded this prize.  I am also humbled by this wonderful recognition by the German scientific and academic community.”  The full article can be found at the bottom of the second page of ‘the Bulletin’ found here.

Professor Buchweitz was also featured in an article for the UTSC news that talks about his research and how it is currently being used.  That article can be found here.

We are proud to recognize this great achievement by Professor Buchweitz and wish him the best in his continued research!

Math TA Shortlisted for Excellence Award

Congratulations go to Andrew Holm, a TA within the Mathematics Department, who was recently nominated for the 2010 Teaching Assistants’ Training Program (TATP) Teaching Excellence Award.  Out of 189 nominated TAs (with over 500 nominations) he was one of 12 chosen to be short-listed for the award.

The purpose of the award is to recognize outstanding achievements of teaching assistants across all four divisions in the School of Graduate Students at the University of Toronto.  It is a great achievement for Andrew and once again recognizes the excellence in our TAs within the department.

When asked about the nomination and if he had any advice to give to other fellow TAs Andrew had the following to say:

Andrew Holm

Andrew Holm was recently short-listed for the 2010 TATP Teaching Excellence Awards

“I have always felt a sense of satisfaction and fulfillment when I help others and share my knowledge and experiences to further their learning. For that reason, I have always aspired to be a teacher.

I think that teaching offers an opportunity to instil a love of learning into students, while the same time, playing a role in the shaping of our future.

Teaching is an ongoing learning process. Through experience and feedback from students and other teachers, I hope to continually improve my own teaching abilities.

In addition to providing important learning opportunities, teachers need to foster good character development by modelling kindness, respect, and good citizenship.

I believe I posses all these traits which are some reasons why I was selected for this award.”

The Department extends it’s congratulations to Andrew for this honoured nomination!