India-born Akshay Venkatesh wins Fields Medal, the 'Nobel' of mathematics

India-born Akshay Venkatesh wins Fields Medal, the 'Nobel' of mathematics
02 Aug 2018
  • New-Delhi born and Australia-bred Akshay Venkatesh has made India real proud.
  • He's one of the four winners of the prestigious Fields medal, which is often called the 'Nobel Prize' for mathematics (there's no Nobel for mathematics).
  • The 36-year-old, who recently shifted from Stanford University to teach at Princeton, won the medal for his "profound contributions" to a "broad range of subjects in mathematics."

Former child prodigy wins his subject's highest honor
Genius
  • Venkatesh, a former child prodigy, graduated from University of Western Australia (UWA) in Pure Mathematics when he was 16.
  • Yesterday, he received his subject's highest tribute, which included a 15,000 Canadian dollar cash prize, at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Rio de Janeiro.
  • He was honored for his use of dynamic-theory, which studies equations of moving objects to solve problems in number theory.

'You feel like you've been part of something really meaningful'
Post-win
  • Venkatesh, who describes mathematics as an art that takes him "to a state of transcendence," said that, it felt "like you've been part of something really meaningful."
  • His mother Svetha, a Deakin University computer science professor, expressed pride on his achievement.
  • His mentor Cheryl Praeger, retired UWA mathematics professor, said Venkatesh had always been an extraordinary child and loved everything about mathematics.

Solved subconvexity problem using own theory
Field of work
  • Venkatesh's brilliance came through when he solved the "subconvexity problem" using his own techniques.
  • He's also known to use representation theory (represents abstract algebra in terms of linear algebra) and topology theory (study of properties of structures that are deformed through stretching or twisting).
  • Venkatesh is the second Australian to win the award after Terry Tao, who won in 2006.

Others: Professors of Cambridge, Bonn varsity, ETH Zurich
Rest three
  • The Fields medal is given every four years to a minimum of two and maximum four mathematicians aged under 40.
  • Venkatesh is accompanied by Caucher Birkar, Cambridge University professor of Iranian-Kurdish origin; Germany's Peter Scholze, who teaches at University of Bonn; and Alessio Figalli, an Italian mathematician at ETH Zurich.
  • Bizarrely, Birkar's medal got stolen before the ceremony. Efforts are on to retrieve it.



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