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The Clay Mathematics Institute (CMI) is a private, non-profit foundation dedicated to increasing and disseminating mathematical knowledge. Formerly based in Peterborough, New Hampshire, [1] the corporate address is now in Denver, Colorado. CMI's scientific activities are managed from the President's office in Oxford, United Kingdom. It gives ...
Work in, influence on or service to mathematics, particularly in relation to advancing the careers of women in mathematics United Kingdom: Berwick Prize: London Mathematical Society: Recognition of an outstanding piece of mathematical research United Kingdom: Clay Research Award: Clay Mathematics Institute: Major breakthroughs in mathematical ...
The Clay Research Award is an annual award given by the Oxford-based Clay Mathematics Institute to mathematicians to recognize their achievements in mathematical research. The following mathematicians have received the award:
The Clay Mathematics Institute officially designated the title Millennium Problem for the seven unsolved mathematical problems, the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture, Hodge conjecture, Navier–Stokes existence and smoothness, P versus NP problem, Riemann hypothesis, Yang–Mills existence and mass gap, and the Poincaré conjecture at the ...
Popular lecture on Hodge Conjecture by Dan Freed (University of Texas) Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine Biswas, Indranil ; Paranjape, Kapil Hari (2002), "The Hodge Conjecture for general Prym varieties", Journal of Algebraic Geometry , 11 (1): 33– 39, arXiv : math/0007192 , doi : 10.1090/S1056-3911-01-00303-4 , MR 1865912 , S2CID ...
The Yang–Mills existence and mass gap problem is an unsolved problem in mathematical physics and mathematics, and one of the seven Millennium Prize Problems defined by the Clay Mathematics Institute, which has offered a prize of US$1,000,000 for its solution. The problem is phrased as follows: [1] Yang–Mills Existence and Mass Gap.
Clay Mathematics Institute: 2000 Simon problems: 15 <12 [7] [8] Barry Simon: 2000 Unsolved Problems on Mathematics for the 21st Century [9] 22-Jair Minoro Abe, Shotaro Tanaka: 2001 DARPA's math challenges [10] [11] 23-DARPA: 2007 Erdős's problems [12] >934: 617: Paul Erdős: Over six decades of Erdős' career, from the 1930s to 1990s
Maggie Miller is a mathematician and an assistant professor in the mathematics department at the University of Texas at Austin. She was also a former Visiting Clay Fellow, and Stanford Science Fellow at Stanford University in the Mathematics Department. [1] Her primary research area is low-dimensional topology.