Ana Caraiani

Ana Caraiani is a Romanian-American mathematician, who is a Royal Society University Research Fellow and Reader at Imperial College London.[1] Her research interests include algebraic number theory and the Langlands program.

Mathematics competitions

In 2001, Caraiani became the first Romanian female competitor in 25 years at the International Mathematical Olympiad, where she won a silver medal. In the following two years, she won two gold medals.[1][2][3]

As an undergraduate student at Princeton University, Caraiani was a two-time Putnam Fellow (the only female competitor at the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition to win more than once) and Elizabeth Lowell Putnam Award winner.[1][4][5]

Education and career

Caraiani graduated summa cum laude from Princeton in 2007, with an undergraduate thesis on Galois representations supervised by Andrew Wiles.[1]

Caraiani did her graduate studies at Harvard University under the supervision of Wiles' student Richard Taylor, earning her Ph.D. in 2012 with a dissertation concerning local-global compatibility in the Langlands correspondence.[1][6]

After spending a year as an L.E. Dickson Instructor at the University of Chicago, she returned to Princeton and the IAS as a Veblen Instructor.[1] In 2016 she was appointed a Bonn Junior Fellow and moved to the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics. She moved to Imperial in 2017.

Recognition

In 2007 the Association for Women in Mathematics gave Caraiani their Alice T. Schafer Prize.[1][4]

In 2018 she was one of the winners of the Whitehead Prize of the London Mathematical Society.[7]

She was elected as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in the 2020 Class, for "contributions to arithmetic geometry and number theory, in particular the -adic Langlands program".[8] She is one of the 2020 winners of the EMS Prize.[9]

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gollark: It may, perhaps, be more productive to explain things rather than saying "you literally cannot understand".
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gollark: *Possibly*.
gollark: Possibly *justified* gatekeeping.

References

  1. Curriculum vitae, retrieved 2018-03-28.
  2. Rimer, Sara (October 10, 2008), "Math Skills Suffer in U.S., Study Finds", The New York Times.
  3. "Ana Caraiani – de la "Mihai Viteazul" – medalie de aur si la Olimpiada de Matematica de la Tokyo", Curierul Național (in Romanian), July 21, 2003, archived from the original on December 31, 2014, retrieved December 30, 2014.
  4. Seventeenth Annual Alice T. Schafer Prize, Association for Women in Mathematics, retrieved 2014-12-30.
  5. Young, Ellen (April 14, 2004), "Caraiani wins prestigious Putnam prize at math competition", Daily Princetonian, archived from the original on December 31, 2014, retrieved December 30, 2014.
  6. Ana Caraiani at the Mathematics Genealogy Project.
  7. "Prizes of the London Mathematical Society" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 65 (9): 1122, October 2018
  8. 2020 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2019-11-03
  9. Prize Winners Announced, European Mathematical Society, 8 May 2020
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