Jacques Herbrand Prize

The Jacques Herbrand Prize (French: Prix Jacques Herbrand) is an award given by the French Academy of Sciences to young researchers (up to 35 years) in the field of mathematics, physics, and their non-military applications. It was created in 1996, and first awarded in 1998. In 2001, it was renamed to Grand Prix Jacques Herbrand .[1] Until 2002, the prize was given each year in both fields; since 2003, it is given alternatingly. It is endowed with 15000,[2] later with 20000[1] euros, and named in honor of the French logician Jacques Herbrand (1908-1931).

Recipients

gollark: Oh, they dropped the 970's prices? In any case other 1TB disks are available for maybe £80-£90 and NVMe ones for a little more.
gollark: Pointlessly fast because sequential IO, which is the main point of NVMe disks, is not usually the bottleneck.
gollark: One of the pointlessly fast and expensive PCIe ones, too.
gollark: I just recognized 970 evos as being some sort of samsung SSD.
gollark: That doesn't apply to SSDs.

See also

References


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