Fields Medal
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The Fields Medal is a prize awarded to up to four mathematicians not over forty years of age at each International Congress of the International Mathematical Union (therefore once every four years). Founded at the behest of Canadian mathematician John Charles Fields, the medal was first awarded in 1936 and has been regularly awarded since 1950. Its purpose is to give recognition and support to young mathematical researchers who have made important contributions.
The Fields Medal is often described as the "Nobel Prize of mathematics". The comparison is not very accurate, in particular because the age limit is applied strictly. Moreover, Fields Medals have generally been awarded for a body of work, rather than for a particular result.
Other top math prizes include:
- The Wolf Prize in Mathematics, created in 1978 as a high-profile "lifetime achievement" award in mathematics.
- The Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement, created in 1993 after a reorganization of the Steele prizes.
- The Abel Prize, created in 2003 by the Norwegian government specifically to be a "mathematics Nobel".
- The Millennium Prize, created in 2000 by the Clay Mathematics Institute to award $1,000,000 for proofs or solutions to each of seven unsolved problems.
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Laureates
- 2002: Laurent Lafforgue (France), Vladimir Voevodsky (Russia/US)
- 1998: Richard Ewen Borcherds (GB), William Timothy Gowers (GB), Maxim Kontsevich (Russia), Curtis T. McMullen (US)
- 1994: Efim Isakovich Zelmanov (Russia), Pierre-Louis Lions (France), Jean Bourgain (Belgium), Jean-Christophe Yoccoz (France)
- 1990: Vladimir Drinfeld (USSR), Vaughan Frederick Randal Jones (New Zealand), Shigefumi Mori (Japan), Edward Witten (US)
- 1986: Simon Donaldson (GB), Gerd Faltings (West Germany), Michael Freedman (US)
- 1982: Alain Connes (France) , William Thurston (US), Shing-Tung Yau (China)
- 1978: Pierre Deligne (Belgium), Charles Fefferman (US), Grigory Margulis (USSR), Daniel Quillen (US)
- 1974: Enrico Bombieri (Italy), David Mumford (US)
- 1970: Alan Baker (GB), Heisuke Hironaka (Japan), Sergei Petrovich Novikov (USSR), John Griggs Thompson (GB)
- 1966: Michael Atiyah (GB), Paul Joseph Cohen (US), Alexander Grothendieck (France), Stephen Smale (US)
- 1962: Lars Hörmander (Sweden), John Milnor (US)
- 1958: Klaus Roth (GB), Rene Thom (France)
- 1954: Kunihiko Kodaira (Japan), Jean-Pierre Serre (France)
- 1950: Laurent Schwartz (France), Atle Selberg (Norway)
- 1936: Lars Ahlfors (Finland), Jesse Douglas (US)
Unusual circumstances
In 1978, Gregori Margulis, due to restrictions placed on him by the Soviet government, was unable to travel to the congress in Helsinki to receive his medal. The award was accepted on his behalf by Jacques Tits, who said in his address:
I cannot but express my deep disappointment - no doubt shared by many people here - in the absence of Margulis from this ceremony. In view of the symbolic meaning of this city of Helsinki, I had indeed grounds to hope that I would have a chance at last to meet a mathematician whom I know only through his work and for whom I have the greatest respect and admiration.[1]
In 1982, the congress was to be held in Warsaw, Poland but had to be moved to the next year, due to political instability. The awards were announced at the ninth General Assembly of the IMU earlier in the year and awarded at the 1983 Warsaw congress.
In 1998, at the ICM, Andrew Wiles was presented by the chair of the Fields Medal Committee, Yuri Manin, with the first-ever IMU silver plaque in recognition of his proof of Fermat's last theorem. Accounts of this award frequently make reference that at the time of the award Wiles was over the age limit for the Fields medal, e.g. see [2] He was thought to be a favorite to win the medal in 1994, but a gap (later resolved by Wiles) was found in 1993. [3]
The Fields Medal in popular culture
In the 1997 film Good Will Hunting, fictional MIT professor Gerald Lambeau (played by Stellan Skarsgård) is described as having been awarded a Fields Medal for his work in combinatorial mathematics.
In the film A Beautiful Mind, John Forbes Nash complains about not winning the Fields Medal, along with not being the only one on the cover of Fortune Magazine.
See also
External links
de:Fields-Medaille es:Medalla Fields eo:Medalo Fields fr:Médaille Fields ko:필즈상 it:Medaglia Fields he:מדליית פילדס hu:Fields-érem mn:Фильдсийн медаль nl:Fields-medaille ja:フィールズ賞 no:Fieldsmedaljen pl:Medal Fieldsa ro:Medalia Fields sl:Fieldsova medalja fi:Fieldsin mitali sv:Fieldsmedaljen zh:菲尔兹奖