- Joined
- Jan 30, 2003
- Messages
- 6,010
- Reaction score
- 13
- Pronouns
- She/Her
A reclusive Russian won the math world's highest honor Tuesday for solving a problem that has stumped some of the discipline's greatest minds for a century—but he refused the award.
Grigory Perelman, a 40-year-old native of St. Petersburg, won a Fields Medal—often described as math's equivalent of the Nobel prize—for a breakthrough in topology that experts say might help scientists figure out the shape of the universe.
Besides shunning the award, colleagues say he also seems uninterested in a separate US$1 million (euro775,000) prize he is eligible for over his feat: apparently proving the Poincaré conjecture, a theorem about the nature of multidimensional space that has been one of math's greatest puzzles for 100 years.
The award, given out only every four years, was announced at the International Congress of Mathematicians. Three other mathematicians—Russian Andrei Okounkov, Frenchman Wendelin Werner and Australian Terence Tao—also won Fields medals in other areas of mathematics. They received their awards from King Juan Carlos to loud applause from delegates to the conference. But Perelman was not present.
"I regret that Dr. Perelman has declined to accept the medal,'' said John Ball, president of the International Mathematical Union, which is holding the convention. But Perelman said he felt isolated from the mathematics community and refused the medal because "he does not want to be seen as its figurehead,'' Ball said. He would not go into detail about why Perelman feels isolated.
Perelman's work is still under review, but no one has found any serious flaw in it, the math union said in a statement.
The Fields medals were founded in 1936 and named after Canadian mathematician John Charles Fields. They carry a stipend of 15,000 Canadian dollars (US$13,400; euro10,400).
The million dollar prize money in the specific Poincare case is separate, and will be announced in about two years by a private foundation called The Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
If his proof stands the test of time, Perelman will win all or part of the US$1 million (euro775,000) prize money. In 2000, the institute announced bounties for seven unresolved, historic math problems, including the Poincare conjecture.
Academics have been studying Perelman's proof ever since he left the first of three papers on it on an Internet math archives in Nov. 2002—itself an odd gesture, because normal procedure would have been to seek publication in a peer-approved journal.
For those of you who are interested, these are the other unresolved, historic math problems, worth $1 million (US) dollars each.
Grigory Perelman, a 40-year-old native of St. Petersburg, won a Fields Medal—often described as math's equivalent of the Nobel prize—for a breakthrough in topology that experts say might help scientists figure out the shape of the universe.
Besides shunning the award, colleagues say he also seems uninterested in a separate US$1 million (euro775,000) prize he is eligible for over his feat: apparently proving the Poincaré conjecture, a theorem about the nature of multidimensional space that has been one of math's greatest puzzles for 100 years.
The award, given out only every four years, was announced at the International Congress of Mathematicians. Three other mathematicians—Russian Andrei Okounkov, Frenchman Wendelin Werner and Australian Terence Tao—also won Fields medals in other areas of mathematics. They received their awards from King Juan Carlos to loud applause from delegates to the conference. But Perelman was not present.
"I regret that Dr. Perelman has declined to accept the medal,'' said John Ball, president of the International Mathematical Union, which is holding the convention. But Perelman said he felt isolated from the mathematics community and refused the medal because "he does not want to be seen as its figurehead,'' Ball said. He would not go into detail about why Perelman feels isolated.
Perelman's work is still under review, but no one has found any serious flaw in it, the math union said in a statement.
The Fields medals were founded in 1936 and named after Canadian mathematician John Charles Fields. They carry a stipend of 15,000 Canadian dollars (US$13,400; euro10,400).
The million dollar prize money in the specific Poincare case is separate, and will be announced in about two years by a private foundation called The Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
If his proof stands the test of time, Perelman will win all or part of the US$1 million (euro775,000) prize money. In 2000, the institute announced bounties for seven unresolved, historic math problems, including the Poincare conjecture.
Academics have been studying Perelman's proof ever since he left the first of three papers on it on an Internet math archives in Nov. 2002—itself an odd gesture, because normal procedure would have been to seek publication in a peer-approved journal.
For those of you who are interested, these are the other unresolved, historic math problems, worth $1 million (US) dollars each.
