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Henri Poincaré Prize

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Henri Poincaré Prize is awarded every three years since 1997 for exceptional achievements in mathematical physics and foundational contributions leading to new developments in the field. The prize is sponsored by the Daniel Iagolnitzer Foundation and is awarded to approximately three scientists at the International Congress on Mathematical Physics. The prize was also established to support promising young researchers that already made outstanding contributions in mathematical physics.[1][2][3]

Prize recipients

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Year ICMP Location Prize winner
1997 Brisbane Germany Rudolf Haag
Russia Maxim Kontsevich
United States Arthur Wightman
2000 London United States Joel Lebowitz
Austria Walter Thirring
Taiwan Horng-Tzer Yau
2003 Lisboa Japan Huzihiro Araki
United States Elliott H. Lieb
Israel Oded Schramm
2006 Rio de Janeiro Russia Ludvig D. Faddeev
Belgium France David Ruelle
United States Edward Witten
2009 Prague Switzerland Jürg Fröhlich
Austria Robert Seiringer
Russia Yakov G. Sinai
France Cédric Villani
2012 Aalborg France Nalini Anantharaman
United Kingdom United States Freeman Dyson
France Sylvia Serfaty
United States Barry Simon
2015 Santiago de Chile Russia United States Alexei Borodin
United States Thomas Spencer
Germany Herbert Spohn
2018 Montréal Israel United States Michael Aizenman
South Africa United States Percy Deift
Italy Giovanni Gallavotti
2021[4] Geneva Australia Rodney Baxter
Greece Demetrios Christodoulou
Japan Yoshiko Ogata
Denmark Jan Philip Solovej
2024[5] Strasbourg United Kingdom David Brydges
RussiaUnited States Alexei Kitaev
Finland Antti Kupiainen
United States Scott Sheffield

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Henri Poincaré Prize". International Association of Mathematical Physics. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  2. ^ "May 2004 Report". difoundation.com. Retrieved December 17, 2024.
  3. ^ De Wit, David; Bracken, Anthony J.; Gould, Mark D.; Pearce, Paul A., eds. (1998). 12th International Congress of Mathematical Physics, ICMP '97. International Press of Boston. ISBN 978-1571460554.
  4. ^ "Henri Poincaré Prize - 2021 Prize recipients". icmp2021.com. Retrieved August 4, 2021.
  5. ^ "ICMP 2024". icmp2024.org. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
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