Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize
The Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize is awarded by the American Mathematical Society for notable exposition and exceptional scholarship in the history of mathematics.
Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Notable exposition on the history of mathematics. |
Country | United States |
Presented by | American Mathematical Society (AMS) |
Reward(s) | US $5,000 |
First awarded | 1998 |
Last awarded | 2015 |
Website | www |
The prize was established in 1998 with funds provided by Sally Whiteman in memory of her late husband Albert Leon Whiteman. Originally it was awarded every 4 years with the first prized handed out in 2001. Since 2009 the prize is awarded every 3 years and carries a prize money of $5000.
Past recipients
- 2001 Thomas Hawkins
- 2005 Harold M. Edwards
- 2009 Jeremy Gray
- 2012 Joseph Dauben
- 2015 Umberto Bottazzini
- 2018 Karen Parshall
gollark: Also, people would probably complain if their fiber optic imploded.
gollark: I'm sure so many things will be affected by, what, nanoseconds less latency.
gollark: Power could be done via also having copper (with less problematic signal integrity requirements) bundled in a cable with the fiber optic thingy.
gollark: And networking/some peripherals. We already have fibre 10GbE and up, just not really consumery.
gollark: Fibre optic really needs to get more common, the madness in DP 2.0 to get 80Gbps over copper is just ridiculous.
See also
External links
- Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize on the website of the American Mathematical Society
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