Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics
The Norbert Wiener Prize in Applied Mathematics is a $5000 prize awarded, every three years, for an outstanding contribution to "applied mathematics in the highest and broadest sense." It was endowed in 1967 in honor of Norbert Wiener by MIT's mathematics department and is provided jointly by the American Mathematical Society and Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. The recipient of the prize has to be a member of one of the awarding societies.
Winners
- 1970: Richard E. Bellman
- 1975: Peter D. Lax
- 1980: Tosio Kato and Gerald B. Whitham
- 1985: Clifford S. Gardner
- 1990: Michael Aizenman and Jerrold E. Marsden
- 1995: Hermann Flaschka and Ciprian Foias
- 2000: Alexandre J. Chorin and Arthur Winfree
- 2004: James A. Sethian
- 2007: Craig Tracy and Harold Widom
- 2010: David Donoho
- 2013: Andrew Majda
- 2016: Constantine M. Dafermos
- 2019: Marsha Berger and Arkadi Nemirovski
gollark: Ah, so it also scrapes search results?
gollark: ddg! cryoapioforms
gollark: Actually, Rust is perfect and without flaw, and everyone knows that what adding two arrays obviously ought to do is join the elements with commas then concat the resulting strings.
gollark: Hmm. Apparently autocomplete in VSCode mysteriously stopped working.
gollark: "Yes, this angle is 3141 milliradians".
See also
- List of mathematics awards
- Prizes named after people
External links
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