Ling Long (mathematician)

Ling Long is a Chinese mathematician whose research concerns modular forms, elliptic surfaces, and dessins d'enfants,[1][2] as well as number theory in general. She is a professor of mathematics at Louisiana State University.[3]

Ling Long
Born
China
NationalityChinese
Alma materPenn State (Ph. D), Tshinghua University (B.S)
AwardsRuth I. Michler Memorial Prize
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics: Number Theory
InstitutionsLouisiana State University, Iowa State University, Cornell University
Doctoral advisorWen-Ch'ing (Winnie) Li (Pennsylvania State University), Noriko Yui (Queen's University)

Early life and education

Ling Long was born in the 1970s in China. She is the oldest child in a family of four; Ling has one younger brother.[4]

Long studied mathematics, computer science, and engineering at Tsinghua University, graduating in 1997.[1] She went to Pennsylvania State University for her graduate studies; her dissertation, Modularity of Elliptic Surfaces, she worked on with Noriko Yui, visiting from Queen's University, in her time as a graduate student. She was supervised and influenced by Winnie Li[5][1].

Career

After postdoctoral research at the Institute for Advanced Studies, Long joined the faculty at Iowa State University in 2003. She was the 2012–2013 winner of the Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize of the Association for Women in Mathematics.[1][2] She spent the 2012–2013 term at Cornell University with funding from the Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize. During this time, she conducted research in Galois representations with Ravi Ramakishna, and published a paper called "Some supercongruences occurring in truncated hypergeometric series".[6] After her time at Cornell, she moved to Louisiana State.

Social factors

Long acknowledged that there was a stigma against women pursuing math careers when she was growing up, and that it was unusual for girls to continue math after the age of twelve. However, she didn't let the opinions of others influence her decision to become a mathematician.[4] Long participated in the Women in Number Theory (WIN) conference in 2008.[7] While completing her PhD, she was influenced greatly by her supervisor, Wen-Ching Winnie Li. Li proved to be an influential mentor and role model for Long, especially in the midst of self-doubt as to whether she possessed the creativity needed for such a high level of mathematics.[4]

gollark: I have tried iPhones.
gollark: I did get ~15s better boot times from the change. I just don't care.
gollark: People can read something like 300WPM. Be efficienter.
gollark: Obviously SSD vs HDD is a big jump, but SATA is still fast enough for most consumer uses.
gollark: I've seen 4K displays and don't really care. My laptop screen is 120Hz and it is not significantly different from my 60Hz monitor, except for slightly better colours but this isn't very related. I recently got a mid-range-ish phone instead of the cheapest-available ones I usually would and it's somewhat nicer (better haptics and sensors mostly), but premium ones seem to have very diminishing returns from the ones I've interacted with. I've tried a few mechanical keyboards and they don't seem significantly nicer (one was even *worse* for me due to excessively tall keys/high key travel). I also have an NVMe disk and it does not feel very different to the SATA SSDs I had before.

References

  1. Ling Long wins Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize, Association for Women in Mathematics, February 25, 2012
  2. "Long Awarded Michler Prize" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 59 (5): 691, May 2012
  3. Ling Long, Louisiana State University Department of Mathematics, retrieved 2018-02-19
  4. [personal conversation]
  5. Ling Long at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. Long, Ling; Ramakrishna, Ravi (2016-02-26). "Some supercongruences occurring in truncated hypergeometric series". Advances in Mathematics. 290: 773–808. arXiv:1403.5232. doi:10.1016/j.aim.2015.11.043. ISSN 0001-8708.
  7. "WIN (2008) – Women in Number Theory". womeninnumbertheory.org. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
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