Carolina Araujo (mathematician)
Carolina Bhering de Araujo is a Brazilian mathematician specializing in algebraic geometry, including birational geometry, Fano varieties, and foliations.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Carolina Araujo | |
---|---|
Born | Carolina Bhering de Araujo Rio de Janeiro |
Nationality | Brazilian |
Alma mater | Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (BSc) Princeton University (PhD) |
Known for | Algebraic geometry |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada |
Thesis | The Variety of Tangents to Rational Curves (2004) |
Doctoral advisor | János Kollár |
Education and career
Araujo was born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[7] Araujo did her undergraduate studies in Brazil, completing a degree in mathematics in 1998 from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro.[2] She earned her Ph.D. in 2004 at Princeton University, where her dissertation, supervised by János Kollár, was titled The Variety of Tangents to Rational Curves.[3][5][7]
She is currently a researcher at the Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada in Brazil (IMPA), and the only woman (as of 2018) on the permanent research staff at IMPA.[1] She is also a Simons Associate at The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTCP). She is the vice-president of the Committee for Women in Mathematics at the International Mathematical Union.[7]
During and after her PhD, Araujo developed techniques related to Japanese mathematician Shigefumi Mori's proposed theory of rational curves of minimal degree, which she published in 2008.[7][8]
Honors and awards
Araujo won the L'Oreal Award for Women in Science in Brazil in 2008.[6][4]
Araujo was both an organizer and an invited speaker at the 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians.[3][7] She led the inaugural World Meeting for Women in Mathematics — (WM)2 in August 2018.[7] She was also one of the female mathematicians profiled in the short documentary called Journeys of Women in Mathematics, funded by the Simons Foundation.[1][7][9]
Selected bibliography
- Carolina Araujo, Stéphane Druel and Sándor J. Kovács. Cohomological characterizations of projective spaces and hyperquadrics. Inventiones Mathematicae. 2008.
- Carolina Araujo and Maurício Corrêa Jr. On degeneracy schemes of maps of vector bundles and applications to holomorphic foliations. Mathematische Zeitschrift. 2014.
- Carolina Araujo and Alex Massarenti. Explicit log Fano structures on blow‐ups of projective spaces. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 2016.
- Carolina Araujo and Cinzia Casagrande. On the Fano variety of linear spaces contained in two odd-dimensional quadrics. Geometry & Topology. 2017.
- Carolina Araujo, Mauricio Corrêa and Alex Massarenti. Codimension one Fano distributions on Fano manifolds. Communications in Contemporary Mathematics. 2018.
References
- Lamb, Evelyn. "Women Mathematicians in Their Own Words". Scientific American Blog Network. Retrieved 2019-01-27.
- "Carolina Bhering de Araujo", Escavador (in Portuguese)
- Carolina Araujo, European Women in Maths, archived from the original on 2018-07-16, retrieved 2018-07-15
- Prêmio Para Mulheres na Ciência L'Oréal-UNESCO-ABC abre inscrições (in Portuguese), Brazilian Mathematical Society, retrieved 2018-07-15
- Carolina Araujo at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- "Mulheres protagonizam atividade do 'Matemática na Urca'", Comunicacao UNIRIO (in Portuguese), October 20, 2016
- "Carolina Araujo Is Building a Network of Women in Mathematics". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2019-01-27.
- Araujo, Carolina; Druel, Stéphane; Kovács, Sándor J. (2008-08-20). "Cohomological characterizations of projective spaces and hyperquadrics". Inventiones Mathematicae. 174 (2): 233. arXiv:0707.4310. Bibcode:2008InMat.174..233A. doi:10.1007/s00222-008-0130-1. ISSN 1432-1297.
- World Women in Mathematics, Journeys of Women in Mathematics Full Length Version, retrieved 2019-01-27
External links
- Faculty profile page for Carolina Araujo at IMPA