Peter Lax |
---|
 Lax in Tokyo in 1969 |
Born | Péter Dávid Lax (1926-05-01)1 May 1926
Budapest, Hungary |
---|
Died | 16 May 2025(2025-05-16) (aged 99)
New York City, U.S. |
---|
Nationality | |
---|
Alma mater | -
- New York University (BS, MS, PhD)
- Texas A&M University
- University of New Mexico
- Stanford University
|
---|
Known for | |
---|
Awards | - Lester R. Ford (1966)
- John von Neumann Prize (1968)
- Chauvenet Prize (1974)
- Norbert Wiener Prize (1975)
- National Medal of Science (1986)
- Wolf Prize (1987)
- Abel Prize (2005)
- Lomonosov Gold Medal (2013)
|
---|
Scientific career |
Fields | Mathematics |
---|
Institutions | Courant Institute |
---|
Thesis | Nonlinear System of Hyperbolic Partial Differential Equations in Two Independent Variables (1949) |
---|
Doctoral advisor | K. O. Friedrichs |
---|
Doctoral students |
- Steve Alpern
- Chen Li-an
- Gregory Beylkin
- Alexandre Chorin
- Charles Epstein
- Michael Ghil
- Ami Harten
- James (Mac) Hyman
- George Logemann
- Jeffrey Rauch
- Burton Wendroff
|
---|
|
Peter David Lax (1 May 1926 – 16 May 2025) was a Hungarian-born American mathematician and Abel Prize laureate working in the areas of pure and applied mathematics.
Lax made important contributions to integrable systems, fluid dynamics and shock waves, solitonic physics, hyperbolic conservation laws, and mathematical and scientific computing, among other fields. In a 1958 paper Lax stated a conjecture about matrix representations for third order hyperbolic polynomials which remained unproven for over four decades. Interest in the "Lax conjecture" grew as mathematicians working in several different areas recognized the importance of its implications in their field, until it was finally proven to be true in 2003.[1]
Early life and education
Lax was born on 1 May 1926 in Budapest, Hungary,[2] to a Jewish family.[3] He began displaying an interest in mathematics at age twelve, and soon his parents hired Rózsa Péter as a tutor for him.[4] His parents Klara Kornfield and Henry Lax were both physicians and his uncle Albert Kornfeld (also known as Albert Korodi) was a mathematician, as well as a friend of Leó Szilárd. The family left Hungary on 15 November 1941, and traveled via Lisbon to the United States.
As a high school student at Stuyvesant High School, Lax took no math classes but did compete on the school math team. During this time, he met with John von Neumann, Richard Courant, and Paul Erdős, who introduced him to Albert Einstein. As he was still 17 when he finished high school, he could avoid military service, and was able to study for three semesters at New York University. He attended a complex analysis class in the role of a student, but ended up taking over as instructor. He met his future wife, Anneli Cahn (married to her first husband at that time) in this class.[4][5]
Before being able to complete his studies, Lax was drafted into the U.S. Army. After basic training, the Army sent him to Texas A&M University for more studies. He was then sent to Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and soon afterwards to the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, New Mexico. At Los Alamos, he began working as a calculator operator, but eventually moved on to higher-level mathematics.[6]
After the war ended, Lax remained with the Army at Los Alamos for another year, while taking courses at the University of New Mexico, then studied at Stanford University for a semester with Gábor Szegő and George Pólya.[4] Lax returned to NYU for the 1946–1947 academic year, and by pooling credits from the four universities at which he had studied, he graduated that year. He stayed at NYU for his graduate studies, marrying Anneli in 1948 and earning a PhD in 1949 under the supervision of Kurt O. Friedrichs.[4][5]
Career
In 1954, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission put Lax and several of his colleagues at NYU in charge of using an early supercomputer to calculate the risk of flooding for a major nuclear reactor if a nearby dam were sabotaged; they concluded that the reactor would be safe.[2]
Lax made contributions to the theory of hyperbolic partial differential equations. He made breakthroughs in understanding shock waves from bombs, weather prediction and aerodynamic design.[2]
Concepts that bear Lax's name include the Lax equivalence principle, which explained when numerical computer approximations would be reliable, and Lax pairs, which are helpful in understanding the motion of solitons. With Ralph Phillips, Lax developed the Lax-Phillips semigroup in scattering theory, which explained how waves move around obstacles and showed how to use the pattern of a wave's frequencies to understand its motion. That theory is helpful in processing radar signals.[2]
Lax held a faculty position in the Department of Mathematics, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University.[7] Beginning in 1963, Dr. Lax directed the Courant Institute's computing facilities.[2]
Lax died of cardiac amyloidosis at his Manhattan home, on 16 May 2025, at the age of 99.[2]
Awards and honors
He was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters[8] and the National Academy of Sciences, USA,[9] the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[10] and the American Philosophical Society.[11] He won a Lester R. Ford Award in 1966[12] and again in 1973.[13] In 1974, his shock wave article[13] also won the Chauvenet Prize. He was awarded the National Medal of Science in 1986, the Wolf Prize in 1987, the Abel Prize in 2005 and the Lomonosov Gold Medal in 2013.[14] The American Mathematical Society selected him as its Gibbs Lecturer for 2007.[15] In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[16]
Lax is listed as an ISI highly cited researcher.[17] According to György Marx he was one of The Martians.[18]
Lax also received an Honorary Doctorate from Heriot-Watt University in 1990.[19]
The CDC 6600 incident
In 1970, as part of an anti-war protest, the Transcendental Students took hostage a CDC 6600 super computer at NYU's Courant Institute which Lax had been instrumental in acquiring; the students demanded $100,000 in ransom (equivalent to $810,000 in 2024) to provide bail for a member of the Black Panthers. Some of the students present attempted to destroy the computer with incendiary devices, but Lax and colleagues managed to disable the devices and save the machine.[20][21]
Books
- ——; Terrell, Maria Shea (21 September 2013). Calculus With Applications. New York, NY: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-7945-1.
- ——; Zalcman, Lawrence (21 December 2011). Complex Proofs of Real Theorems. Providence, R.I: American Mathematical Soc. ISBN 978-0-8218-7559-9.
- Decay of Solutions of Systems of Nonlinear Hyperbolic Conservation Laws, with J. Glimm, American Mathematical Society (1970).
- —— (4 April 2002). Functional Analysis. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-55604-6. (Review[22])
- —— (2006). Hyperbolic Partial Differential Equations. New York: American Mathematical Soc. ISBN 978-0-8218-3576-0.
- —— (1 January 1973). Hyperbolic Systems of Conservation Laws and the Mathematical Theory of Shock Waves. Philadelphia, Pa: SIAM. ISBN 978-0-89871-177-6.
- —— (10 September 2007). Linear Algebra and Its Applications. Hoboken, N.J: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-75156-4.
- —— (1977). Mathematical Aspects of Production and Distribution of Energy. Providence: American Mathematical Soc. ISBN 978-0-8218-0121-5.
- Fujita, H.; ——; Strang, G. (1 April 2000). Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations in Applied Science. Amsterdam: Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-087192-9.
- ——; Nirenberg, L.; Spigler, Renato (1998). Recent Advances in Partial Differential Equations, Venice 1996. Providence, R.I: American Mathematical Soc. ISBN 978-0-8218-0657-9.
- Boillat, Guy; Dafermos, Constantin M.; ——; Liu, Tai-Ping (14 November 2006). Recent Mathematical Methods in Nonlinear Wave Propagation. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-49565-9.
- ——; Phillips, Ralph S. (1989). Scattering Theory, Revised Edition. Boston San Diego New York [etc.]: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-440051-5.
- ——; Phillips, Ralph S. (1976). Scattering Theory for Automorphic Functions. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08184-7.
- —— (2005). Selected papers. Vol. I. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-22925-6. MR 2164867.[23]
- —— (2005). Selected papers. Vol. II. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-22926-3. MR 2164868.
See also
- Babuška–Lax–Milgram theorem
- Lions–Lax–Milgram theorem
- The Martians (scientists)
References
- ^ Lewis, Adrian S.; Parrilo, Pablo A.; Ramana, Motakuri V. (2005). "The Lax conjecture is true". Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 133 (9): 2495–2499. arXiv:math/0304104. doi:10.1090/S0002-9939-05-07752-X. MR 2146191. S2CID 17436983.
- ^ a b c d e f Barany, Michael J.; Shields, Brit (16 May 2025), "Peter Lax, Pre-eminent Cold War Mathematician, Dies at 99", The New York Times, retrieved 22 May 2025
- ^ "Peter Lax | Hungarian-American mathematician".
- ^ a b c d Albers, Donald J.; Alexanderson, Gerald L.; Reid, Constance, eds. (1990), "Peter D. Lax", More Mathematical People, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, pp. 138–159.
- ^ a b Dreifus, Claudia (29 March 2005). "A Conversation with Peter Lax – From Budapest to Los Alamos, a Life in Mathematics". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 October 2007.
- ^ Hersh, Reuben (2015). Peter Lax, mathematician. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society. p. 24. doi:10.1090/mbk/088. ISBN 978-1-4704-1708-6. MR 3243612.
- ^ "Peter D. Lax". math.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ "Gruppe 1: Matematiske fag" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
- ^ "Peter D. Lax". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ "Peter David Lax". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ Lax, Peter D. (1965). "Numerical solutions of partial differential equations". Amer. Math. Monthly. 72, Part II (2): 78–84. doi:10.2307/2313313. JSTOR 2313313.
- ^ a b Lax, Peter D. (1972). "The formation and decay of shock waves". Amer. Math. Monthly. 79 (3): 227–241. doi:10.2307/2316618. JSTOR 2316618.
- ^ "Большая золотая медаль РАН имени М.В. Ломоносова".
- ^ Lax, Peter D. (2008). "Mathematics and physics". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 45 (1): 135–152. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-07-01182-2. MR 2358380.
- ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 27 January 2013.
- ^ Thomson ISI. "Lax, Peter D., ISI Highly Cited Researchers". Retrieved 20 June 2009.
- ^ A marslakók legendája - György Marx
- ^ "Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh: Honorary Graduates". www1.hw.ac.uk. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
- ^ Philip Colella (26 April 2004). "Peter Lax". The History of Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing. Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.
- ^ Barron, James (7 December 2015). "The Mathematicians Who Saved a Kidnapped N.Y.U. Computer". The New York Times.
- ^ Zhu, Meijun (2006). "Review: Functional analysis, by Peter D. Lax" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 43 (1): 123–126. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-05-01073-6.
- ^ Hersh, Reuben (2006). "Review of Selected papers of Peter Lax, Vol. I, edited by Peter Sarnak and Andrew Majda". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 43: 605–608. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-06-01117-7.
External links
Laureates of the Wolf Prize in Mathematics |
---|
1970s |
- Israel Gelfand / Carl L. Siegel (1978)
- Jean Leray / André Weil (1979)
|
---|
1980s |
- Henri Cartan / Andrey Kolmogorov (1980)
- Lars Ahlfors / Oscar Zariski (1981)
- Hassler Whitney / Mark Krein (1982)
- Shiing-Shen Chern / Paul Erdős (1983/84)
- Kunihiko Kodaira / Hans Lewy (1984/85)
- Samuel Eilenberg / Atle Selberg (1986)
- Kiyosi Itô / (1987)
- Friedrich Hirzebruch / Lars Hörmander (1988)
- Alberto Calderón / John Milnor (1989)
|
---|
1990s |
- Ennio De Giorgi / Ilya Piatetski-Shapiro (1990)
- Lennart Carleson / John G. Thompson (1992)
- Mikhail Gromov / Jacques Tits (1993)
- Jürgen Moser (1994/95)
- Robert Langlands / Andrew Wiles (1995/96)
- Joseph Keller / Yakov G. Sinai (1996/97)
- László Lovász / Elias M. Stein (1999)
|
---|
2000s |
- Raoul Bott / Jean-Pierre Serre (2000)
- Vladimir Arnold / Saharon Shelah (2001)
- Mikio Sato / John Tate (2002/03)
- Grigory Margulis / Sergei Novikov (2005)
- Stephen Smale / Hillel Furstenberg (2006/07)
- Pierre Deligne / Phillip A. Griffiths / David B. Mumford (2008)
|
---|
2010s |
- Dennis Sullivan / Shing-Tung Yau (2010)
- Michael Aschbacher / Luis Caffarelli (2012)
- George Mostow / Michael Artin (2013)
- Peter Sarnak (2014)
- James G. Arthur (2015)
- Richard Schoen / Charles Fefferman (2017)
- Alexander Beilinson / Vladimir Drinfeld (2018)
- Jean-François Le Gall / Gregory Lawler (2019)
|
---|
2020s |
- Simon K. Donaldson / Yakov Eliashberg (2020)
- George Lusztig (2022)
- Ingrid Daubechies (2023)
- Noga Alon / Adi Shamir (2024)
|
---|
Mathematics portal |
Abel Prize laureates |
---|
- 2007 S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
- 2008 John G. Thompson
- Jacques Tits
- 2015 John Forbes Nash Jr.
- Louis Nirenberg
- 2020 Hillel Furstenberg
- Grigory Margulis
- 2021 László Lovász
- Avi Wigderson
|
United States National Medal of Science laureates |
---|
Behavioral and social science |
---|
1960s | |
---|
1980s |
- 1986
- Herbert A. Simon
- 1987
- Anne Anastasi
- George J. Stigler
- 1988
- Milton Friedman
|
---|
1990s |
- 1990
- Leonid Hurwicz
- Patrick Suppes
- 1991
- George A. Miller
- 1992
- Eleanor J. Gibson
- 1994
- Robert K. Merton
- 1995
- Roger N. Shepard
- 1996
- Paul Samuelson
- 1997
- William K. Estes
- 1998
- William Julius Wilson
- 1999
- Robert M. Solow
|
---|
2000s |
- 2000
- Gary Becker
- 2003
- R. Duncan Luce
- 2004
- Kenneth Arrow
- 2005
- Gordon H. Bower
- 2008
- Michael I. Posner
- 2009
- Mortimer Mishkin
|
---|
2010s |
- 2011
- Anne Treisman
- 2014
- Robert Axelrod
- 2015
- Albert Bandura
|
---|
2020s |
- 2023
- Huda Akil
- Shelley E. Taylor
- 2025
- Larry Bartels
|
---|
|
|
Biological sciences |
---|
1960s |
- 1963
- C. B. van Niel
- 1964
- Theodosius Dobzhansky
- Marshall W. Nirenberg
- 1965
- Francis P. Rous
- George G. Simpson
- Donald D. Van Slyke
- 1966
- Edward F. Knipling
- Fritz Albert Lipmann
- William C. Rose
- Sewall Wright
- 1967
- Kenneth S. Cole
- Harry F. Harlow
- Michael Heidelberger
- Alfred H. Sturtevant
- 1968
- Horace Barker
- Bernard B. Brodie
- Detlev W. Bronk
- Jay Lush
- Burrhus Frederic Skinner
- 1969
- Robert Huebner
- Ernst Mayr
|
---|
1970s |
- 1970
- Barbara McClintock
- Albert B. Sabin
- 1973
- Daniel I. Arnon
- Earl W. Sutherland Jr.
- 1974
- Britton Chance
- Erwin Chargaff
- James V. Neel
- James Augustine Shannon
- 1975
- Hallowell Davis
- Paul Gyorgy
- Sterling B. Hendricks
- Orville Alvin Vogel
- 1976
- Roger Guillemin
- Keith Roberts Porter
- Efraim Racker
- E. O. Wilson
- 1979
- Robert H. Burris
- Elizabeth C. Crosby
- Arthur Kornberg
- Severo Ochoa
- Earl Reece Stadtman
- George Ledyard Stebbins
- Paul Alfred Weiss
|
---|
1980s |
- 1981
- Philip Handler
- 1982
- Seymour Benzer
- Glenn W. Burton
- Mildred Cohn
- 1983
- Howard L. Bachrach
- Paul Berg
- Wendell L. Roelofs
- Berta Scharrer
- 1986
- Stanley Cohen
- Donald A. Henderson
- Vernon B. Mountcastle
- George Emil Palade
- Joan A. Steitz
- 1987
- Michael E. DeBakey
- Theodor O. Diener
- Harry Eagle
- Har Gobind Khorana
- Rita Levi-Montalcini
- 1988
- Michael S. Brown
- Stanley Norman Cohen
- Joseph L. Goldstein
- Maurice R. Hilleman
- Eric R. Kandel
- Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
- 1989
- Katherine Esau
- Viktor Hamburger
- Philip Leder
- Joshua Lederberg
- Roger W. Sperry
- Harland G. Wood
|
---|
1990s |
- 1990
- Baruj Benacerraf
- Herbert W. Boyer
- Daniel E. Koshland Jr.
- Edward B. Lewis
- David G. Nathan
- E. Donnall Thomas
- 1991
- Mary Ellen Avery
- G. Evelyn Hutchinson
- Elvin A. Kabat
- Robert W. Kates
- Salvador Luria
- Paul A. Marks
- Folke K. Skoog
- Paul C. Zamecnik
- 1992
- Maxine Singer
- Howard Martin Temin
- 1993
- Daniel Nathans
- Salome G. Waelsch
- 1994
- Thomas Eisner
- Elizabeth F. Neufeld
- 1995
- Alexander Rich
- 1996
- Ruth Patrick
- 1997
- James Watson
- Robert A. Weinberg
- 1998
- Bruce Ames
- Janet Rowley
- 1999
- David Baltimore
- Jared Diamond
- Lynn Margulis
|
---|
2000s |
- 2000
- Nancy C. Andreasen
- Peter H. Raven
- Carl Woese
- 2001
- Francisco J. Ayala
- George F. Bass
- Mario R. Capecchi
- Ann Graybiel
- Gene E. Likens
- Victor A. McKusick
- Harold Varmus
- 2002
- James E. Darnell
- Evelyn M. Witkin
- 2003
- J. Michael Bishop
- Solomon H. Snyder
- Charles Yanofsky
- 2004
- Norman E. Borlaug
- Phillip A. Sharp
- Thomas E. Starzl
- 2005
- Anthony Fauci
- Torsten N. Wiesel
- 2006
- Rita R. Colwell
- Nina Fedoroff
- Lubert Stryer
- 2007
- Robert J. Lefkowitz
- Bert W. O'Malley
- 2008
- Francis S. Collins
- Elaine Fuchs
- J. Craig Venter
- 2009
- Susan L. Lindquist
- Stanley B. Prusiner
|
---|
2010s |
- 2010
- Ralph L. Brinster
- Rudolf Jaenisch
- 2011
- Lucy Shapiro
- Leroy Hood
- Sallie Chisholm
- 2012
- May Berenbaum
- Bruce Alberts
- 2013
- Rakesh K. Jain
- 2014
- Stanley Falkow
- Mary-Claire King
- Simon Levin
|
---|
2020s |
- 2023
- Gebisa Ejeta
- Eve Marder
- Gregory Petsko
- Sheldon Weinbaum
- 2025
- Bonnie Bassler
- Angela Belcher
- Helen Blau
- Emery N. Brown
- G. David Tilman
- Teresa Woodruff
|
---|
|
|
Chemistry |
---|
1960s | |
---|
1980s |
- 1982
- F. Albert Cotton
- Gilbert Stork
- 1983
- Roald Hoffmann
- George C. Pimentel
- Richard N. Zare
- 1986
- Harry B. Gray
- Yuan Tseh Lee
- Carl S. Marvel
- Frank H. Westheimer
- 1987
- William S. Johnson
- Walter H. Stockmayer
- Max Tishler
- 1988
- William O. Baker
- Konrad E. Bloch
- Elias J. Corey
- 1989
- Richard B. Bernstein
- Melvin Calvin
- Rudolph A. Marcus
- Harden M. McConnell
|
---|
1990s |
- 1990
- Elkan Blout
- Karl Folkers
- John D. Roberts
- 1991
- Ronald Breslow
- Gertrude B. Elion
- Dudley R. Herschbach
- Glenn T. Seaborg
- 1992
- Howard E. Simmons Jr.
- 1993
- Donald J. Cram
- Norman Hackerman
- 1994
- George S. Hammond
- 1995
- Thomas Cech
- Isabella L. Karle
- 1996
- Norman Davidson
- 1997
- Darleane C. Hoffman
- Harold S. Johnston
- 1998
- John W. Cahn
- George M. Whitesides
- 1999
- Stuart A. Rice
- John Ross
- Susan Solomon
|
---|
2000s |
- 2000
- John D. Baldeschwieler
- Ralph F. Hirschmann
- 2001
- Ernest R. Davidson
- Gábor A. Somorjai
- 2002
- John I. Brauman
- 2004
- Stephen J. Lippard
- 2005
- Tobin J. Marks
- 2006
- Marvin H. Caruthers
- Peter B. Dervan
- 2007
- Mostafa A. El-Sayed
- 2008
- Joanna Fowler
- JoAnne Stubbe
- 2009
- Stephen J. Benkovic
- Marye Anne Fox
|
---|
2010s |
- 2010
- Jacqueline K. Barton
- Peter J. Stang
- 2011
- Allen J. Bard
- M. Frederick Hawthorne
- 2012
- Judith P. Klinman
- Jerrold Meinwald
- 2013
- Geraldine L. Richmond
- 2014
- A. Paul Alivisatos
- 2025
- R. Lawrence Edwards
|
---|
|
|
Engineering sciences |
---|
1960s | |
---|
1970s | |
---|
1980s |
- 1982
- Edward H. Heinemann
- Donald L. Katz
- 1983
- Bill Hewlett
- George Low
- John G. Trump
- 1986
- Hans Wolfgang Liepmann
- Tung-Yen Lin
- Bernard M. Oliver
- 1987
- Robert Byron Bird
- H. Bolton Seed
- Ernst Weber
- 1988
- Daniel C. Drucker
- Willis M. Hawkins
- George W. Housner
- 1989
- Harry George Drickamer
- Herbert E. Grier
|
---|
1990s |
- 1990
- Mildred Dresselhaus
- Nick Holonyak Jr.
- 1991
- George H. Heilmeier
- Luna B. Leopold
- H. Guyford Stever
- 1992
- Calvin F. Quate
- John Roy Whinnery
- 1993
- Alfred Y. Cho
- 1994
- Ray W. Clough
- 1995
- Hermann A. Haus
- 1996
- James L. Flanagan
- C. Kumar N. Patel
- 1998
- Eli Ruckenstein
- 1999
- Kenneth N. Stevens
|
---|
2000s | |
---|
2010s |
- 2010
- Shu Chien
- 2011
- John B. Goodenough
- 2012
- Thomas Kailath
|
---|
2020s |
- 2023
- Subra Suresh
- 2025
- John Dabiri
|
---|
|
|
Mathematical, statistical, and computer sciences |
---|
1960s |
- 1963
- Norbert Wiener
- 1964
- Solomon Lefschetz
- H. Marston Morse
- 1965
- Oscar Zariski
- 1966
- John Milnor
- 1967
- Paul Cohen
- 1968
- Jerzy Neyman
- 1969
- William Feller
|
---|
1970s |
- 1970
- Richard Brauer
- 1973
- John Tukey
- 1974
- Kurt Gödel
- 1975
- John W. Backus
- Shiing-Shen Chern
- George Dantzig
- 1976
- Kurt Otto Friedrichs
- Hassler Whitney
- 1979
- Joseph L. Doob
- Donald E. Knuth
|
---|
1980s |
- 1982
- Marshall H. Stone
- 1983
- Herman Goldstine
- Isadore Singer
- 1986
- Antoni Zygmund
- 1987
- Raoul Bott
- Michael Freedman
- 1988
- Ralph E. Gomory
- Joseph B. Keller
- 1989
- Samuel Karlin
- Saunders Mac Lane
- Donald C. Spencer
|
---|
1990s |
- 1990
- George F. Carrier
- Stephen Cole Kleene
- John McCarthy
- 1991
- Alberto Calderón
- 1992
- Allen Newell
- 1993
- Martin David Kruskal
- 1994
- John Cocke
- 1995
- Louis Nirenberg
- 1996
- Richard Karp
- Stephen Smale
- 1997
- Shing-Tung Yau
- 1998
- Cathleen Synge Morawetz
- 1999
- Felix Browder
- Ronald R. Coifman
|
---|
2000s |
- 2000
- John Griggs Thompson
- Karen Uhlenbeck
- 2001
- Calyampudi R. Rao
- Elias M. Stein
- 2002
- James G. Glimm
- 2003
- Carl R. de Boor
- 2004
- Dennis P. Sullivan
- 2005
- Bradley Efron
- 2006
- Hyman Bass
- 2007
- Leonard Kleinrock
- Andrew J. Viterbi
- 2009
- David B. Mumford
|
---|
2010s |
- 2010
- Richard A. Tapia
- S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
- 2011
- Solomon W. Golomb
- Barry Mazur
- 2012
- Alexandre Chorin
- David Blackwell
- 2013
- Michael Artin
|
---|
2020s | |
---|
|
|
Physical sciences |
---|
1960s | |
---|
1970s | |
---|
1980s | |
---|
1990s | |
---|
2000s | |
---|
2010s | |
---|
2020s | |
---|
|
|
Chauvenet Prize recipients |
---|
- 1925 G. A. Bliss
- 1929 T. H. Hildebrandt
- 1932 G. H. Hardy
- 1935 Dunham Jackson
- 1938 G. T. Whyburn
- 1941 Saunders Mac Lane
- 1944 R. H. Cameron
- 1947 Paul Halmos
- 1950 Mark Kac
- 1953 E. J. McShane
- 1956 Richard H. Bruck
- 1960 Cornelius Lanczos
- 1963 Philip J. Davis
- 1964 Leon Henkin
- 1965 Jack K. Hale and Joseph P. LaSalle
- 1967 Guido Weiss
- 1968 Mark Kac
- 1970 Shiing-Shen Chern
- 1971 Norman Levinson
- 1972 François Trèves
- 1973 Carl D. Olds
- 1974
- 1975 Martin Davis and Reuben Hersh
- 1976 Lawrence Zalcman
- 1977 W. Gilbert Strang
- 1978 Shreeram S. Abhyankar
- 1979 Neil J. A. Sloane
- 1980 Heinz Bauer
- 1981 Kenneth I. Gross
- 1982 No award given.
- 1983 No award given.
- 1984 R. Arthur Knoebel
- 1985 Carl Pomerance
- 1986 George Miel
- 1987 James H. Wilkinson
- 1988 Stephen Smale
- 1989 Jacob Korevaar
- 1990 David Allen Hoffman
- 1991 W. B. Raymond Lickorish and Kenneth C. Millett
- 1992 Steven G. Krantz
- 1993 David H. Bailey, Jonathan M. Borwein and Peter B. Borwein
- 1994 Barry Mazur
- 1995 Donald G. Saari
- 1996 Joan Birman
- 1997 Tom Hawkins
- 1998 Alan Edelman and Eric Kostlan
- 1999 Michael I. Rosen
- 2000 Don Zagier
- 2001 Carolyn S. Gordon and David L. Webb
- 2002 Ellen Gethner, Stan Wagon, and Brian Wick
- 2003 Thomas C. Hales
- 2004 Edward B. Burger
- 2005 John Stillwell
- 2006 Florian Pfender & Günter M. Ziegler
- 2007 Andrew J. Simoson
- 2008 Andrew Granville
- 2009 Harold P. Boas
- 2010 Brian J. McCartin
- 2011 Bjorn Poonen
- 2012 Dennis DeTurck, Herman Gluck, Daniel Pomerleano & David Shea Vela-Vick
- 2013 Robert Ghrist
- 2014 Ravi Vakil
- 2015 Dana Mackenzie
- 2016 Susan H. Marshall & Donald R. Smith
- 2017 Mark Schilling
- 2018 Daniel J. Velleman
- 2019 Tom Leinster
- 2020 Vladimir Pozdnyakov & J. Michael Steele
- 2021 Travis Kowalski
- 2022 William Dunham, Ezra Brown & Matthew Crawford
- 2023 Kimmo Eriksson & Jonas Eliasson
- 2024 Jeffrey Whitmer
|
John von Neumann Lecturers |
---|
- Lars Ahlfors (1960)
- Mark Kac (1961)
- Jean Leray (1962)
- Stanislaw Ulam (1963)
- Solomon Lefschetz (1964)
- Freeman Dyson (1965)
- Eugene Wigner (1966)
- Chia-Chiao Lin (1967)
- (1968)
- George F. Carrier (1969)
- James H. Wilkinson (1970)
- Paul Samuelson (1971)
- Jule Charney (1974)
- James Lighthill (1975)
- René Thom (1976)
- Kenneth Arrow (1977)
- Peter Henrici (1978)
- Kurt O. Friedrichs (1979)
- Keith Stewartson (1980)
- Garrett Birkhoff (1981)
- David Slepian (1982)
- Joseph B. Keller (1983)
- Jürgen Moser (1984)
- John W. Tukey (1985)
- Jacques-Louis Lions (1986)
- Richard M. Karp (1987)
- Germund Dahlquist (1988)
- Stephen Smale (1989)
- Andrew Majda (1990)
- R. Tyrrell Rockafellar (1992)
- Martin D. Kruskal (1994)
- Carl de Boor (1996)
- William Kahan (1997)
- Olga Ladyzhenskaya (1998)
- Charles S. Peskin (1999)
- Persi Diaconis (2000)
- David Donoho (2001)
- Eric Lander (2002)
- Heinz-Otto Kreiss (2003)
- Alan C. Newell (2004)
- Jerrold E. Marsden (2005)
- George C. Papanicolaou (2006)
- Nancy Kopell (2007)
- David Gottlieb (2008)
- Franco Brezzi (2009)
- Bernd Sturmfels (2010)
- Ingrid Daubechies (2011)
- John M. Ball (2012)
- Stanley Osher (2013)
- Leslie Greengard (2014)
- Jennifer Tour Chayes (2015)
- Donald Knuth (2016)
- Bernard J. Matkowsky (2017)
- Charles F. Van Loan (2018)
- Margaret H. Wright (2019)
- Nick Trefethen (2020)
- Chi-Wang Shu (2021)
- Leah Keshet (2022)
- Yousef Saad (2023)
- Jorge Nocedal (2024)
|
Presidents of the American Mathematical Society |
---|
1888–1900 |
- John Howard Van Amringe (1888–1890)
- Emory McClintock (1891–1894)
- George William Hill (1895–1896)
- Simon Newcomb (1897–1898)
- Robert Simpson Woodward (1899–1900)
|
---|
1901–1924 |
- E. H. Moore (1901–1902)
- Thomas Fiske (1903–1904)
- William Fogg Osgood (1905–1906)
- Henry Seely White (1907–1908)
- Maxime Bôcher (1909–1910)
- Henry Burchard Fine (1911–1912)
- Edward Burr Van Vleck (1913–1914)
- Ernest William Brown (1915–1916)
- Leonard Eugene Dickson (1917–1918)
- Frank Morley (1919–1920)
- Gilbert Ames Bliss (1921–1922)
- Oswald Veblen (1923–1924)
|
---|
1925–1950 |
- George David Birkhoff (1925–1926)
- Virgil Snyder (1927–1928)
- Earle Raymond Hedrick (1929–1930)
- Luther P. Eisenhart (1931–1932)
- Arthur Byron Coble (1933–1934)
- Solomon Lefschetz (1935–1936)
- Robert Lee Moore (1937–1938)
- Griffith C. Evans (1939–1940)
- Marston Morse (1941–1942)
- Marshall H. Stone (1943–1944)
- Theophil Henry Hildebrandt (1945–1946)
- Einar Hille (1947–1948)
- Joseph L. Walsh (1949–1950)
|
---|
1951–1974 |
- John von Neumann (1951–1952)
- Gordon Thomas Whyburn (1953–1954)
- Raymond Louis Wilder (1955–1956)
- Richard Brauer (1957–1958)
- Edward J. McShane (1959–1960)
- Deane Montgomery (1961–1962)
- Joseph L. Doob (1963–1964)
- Abraham Adrian Albert (1965–1966)
- Charles B. Morrey Jr. (1967–1968)
- Oscar Zariski (1969–1970)
- Nathan Jacobson (1971–1972)
- Saunders Mac Lane (1973–1974)
|
---|
1975–2000 |
- Lipman Bers (1975–1976)
- R. H. Bing (1977–1978)
- (1979–1980)
- Andrew M. Gleason (1981–1982)
- Julia Robinson (1983–1984)
- Irving Kaplansky (1985–1986)
- George Mostow (1987–1988)
- William Browder (1989–1990)
- Michael Artin (1991–1992)
- Ronald Graham (1993–1994)
- Cathleen Synge Morawetz (1995–1996)
- Arthur Jaffe (1997–1998)
- Felix Browder (1999–2000)
|
---|
2001–present |
- Hyman Bass (2001–2002)
- David Eisenbud (2003–2004)
- James Arthur (2005–2006)
- James Glimm (2007–2008)
- George Andrews (2009–2010)
- Eric Friedlander (2011–2012)
- David Vogan (2013–2014)
- Robert Bryant (2015–2016)
- Ken Ribet (2017–2018)
- Jill Pipher (2019–2020)
- Ruth Charney (2021–2022)
- Bryna Kra (2023–2024)
- Ravi Vakil (2025-)
|
---|
Authority control databases |
---|
International | |
---|
National | |
---|
Academics | |
---|
Artists | |
---|
People | |
---|
Other | |
---|