Karine Beauchard

Karine Beauchard (born November 27, 1978)[1] is a French mathematician known for her research in control theory. She is a University Professor at the École normale supérieure de Rennes, and was the Peccot Lecturer of the Collège de France for 2007–2008.

Education and career

From 1999 to 2003, Beauchard studied at the École normale supérieure Cachan. She earned her agrégation in 2002 and a Master of Advanced Studies in numerical analysis in 2003 through Pierre and Marie Curie University.[1] She completed a doctorate in 2005 at the University of Paris-Sud; her dissertation, Contribution à l'étude de la contrôlabilité et la stabilisation de l'équation de Schrödinger, was directed by Jean-Michel Coron.[1][2] She earned a habilitation in 2010 at Cachan, with a habilitation thesis on Analyse et contrôle de quelques équations aux dérivées partielles.[1]

She worked at Cachan from 2005 to 2006, and as a chargée de recherche at CNRS from 2006 until 2014, when she took her present position as a professor at Rennes.[1]

Recognition

Beauchard was the Peccot Lecturer of the Collège de France for 2007–2008, giving a course on the control of Schrödinger equations.[3] In 2017 she won the Michel-Monpetit Prize of the French Academy of Sciences.[4] She became a junior member of the Institut Universitaire de France in 2018.[5]

gollark: You can have intelligence without human-like values and stuff.
gollark: Yes you are.
gollark: *Do not anthropomorphise AIs*.
gollark: You know, what is an "AI" anyway?
gollark: Er, AI.

References

  1. Curriculum vitae (PDF), retrieved May 29, 2019
  2. Karine Beauchard at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Liste chronologique des intitulés des cours Peccot depuis 1899 (PDF), French Academy of Sciences, retrieved May 29, 2019
  4. Lauréats 2017 des prix thématiques, French Academy of Sciences, retrieved May 29, 2019
  5. "Karine Beauchard", Les membres, Institut Universitaire de France, retrieved May 29, 2019
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