Conference on “Algebraic and Combinatorial Approaches in Systems Biology”, May 22-24, 2015.
May 19, 2015
May 19, 2015
May 1, 2015
April 27, 2015
The department’s annual awards ceremony, recognizing the outstanding achievements of our undergraduate and graduate students, took place on April 28 in IMS 20. The event was preceded by a reception with tea and light refreshments in the math department lounge.
This year’s speaker was Leo Goldmakher of Williams College, who spoke on “Structure and randomness in the primes”.
For more information, see the full program of events, as well as the photo album on our Facebook page.
April 19, 2015
A memorial session entitled “Probability and Related Topics — in memory of Evarist Giné” to be held during the New England Statistics Symposium (NESS) hosted by the UConn Statistics Department on Saturday, April 25, 3:30-4:45 in AUST 434.
Program:
Rick Vitale (UConn) Welcome
Dick Dudley (MIT) “Evarist as a student, teacher and friend”
Victor de la Pena (Columbia) “Dependence measures: a perspective”
Iddo Ben-Ari (UConn) “Evarist’s favorite undergraduate proof and where it got me”
Lu Lu (Colby) “On the sup-norm behavior of the Bernstein density estimator”
Molly Hahn (Tufts), and others as they would like: “Evarist: Reminiscences”
March 29, 2015
March 16, 2015
The department mourns the loss of our colleague and head, Evarist Giné-Masdéu, who passed away on Friday, March 13. Evarist received his PhD from MIT in 1973 and held positions at a number of other universities before joining UConn in 1990. He was 70 years old.
The following tribute comes from Jeremy Teitelbaum, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Evarist was a distinguished mathematician who worked on mathematical statistics and probability in infinite dimensions. He authored 2 books and over 100 articles, with many appearing in the very top journals in his field such as the Annals of Statistics. His third book, Mathematical Foundations of Infinite-Dimensional Statistical Models, written with a former UConn post-doc of his, Richard Nickl of Cambridge, will appear soon with Cambridge University Press. Among many signs of professional recognition, he was a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, an elected member of the International Statistical Institute, and a recipient of UConn’s Alumni Excellence in Research Award.
In June of 2014, friends and colleagues of Evarist organized a 3 day conference in honor of his 70th birthday at the Center for Mathematical Sciences at Cambridge University in England. The conference drew a worldwide audience who celebrated “the many areas that Evarist transformed and worked on in his distinguished career.”
Evarist was a quiet man with a dry sense of humor. When he assumed the Headship of Mathematics in 2012 after Miki Neumann’s death, he told me that he had never had the desire or ambition to take on the job, but that he felt a sense of responsibility to give back to the department. I will miss his kindness and his dedication.
I know that the department and the entire college joins me in sending Evarist’s wife Rosalind Eastaway, his daughters Roser and Nuria, and his entire family our deepest condolences.
Update (May 29, 2015). For a detailed obituary, see p. 8 of the June/July 2015 issue of the IMS Bulletin.
March 10, 2015
The annual Calculus Competition will be held 7:00-8:30 p.m. Tuesday 24 March 2015 in room 109 of the Mathematical Sciences Building. Cash and book prizes will be awarded in three categories:
All UConn undergraduates, and pre-college students taking math courses at UConn are eligible to participate.
Participants should register by Monday 23 March, either on the sheet outside the Reception Office (MSB 102) or by email to Prof. S. J. Sidney. If registering by email, please give your name, phone number, email address, and the numbers of UConn math courses you are taking now, with instructor names for multi-section courses.
Participants should arrive at the competition by 6:50 the evening of the exam.
February 14, 2015
Our department will be hosting an REU program this summer, with projects on analysis on fractals, math education, representation theory, and stochastic control. For more information, visit the main page for our program, or go directly to the
application submission page. The due date for applications is March 1st.
February 10, 2015
Lan-Hsuan Huang, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, has received a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation.
The CAREER Award, which provides 5 years of support, is the NSF’s most prestigious grant in support of junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars through outstanding research, excellent education and the integration of education and research within the context of the mission of their organizations. Such activities should build a firm foundation for a lifetime of leadership in integrating education and research.
The NSF’s citation for Prof. Huang reads: “Huang’s projects will investigate some fundamental problems in mathematical general relativity that concern the interplay between globally conserved physical quantities and the geometric structure of the universe. Based on successful modeling of astrophysical phenomena provided by the Einstein field equations, interesting and challenging problems in geometric analysis have increasingly arisen to further understand the mathematical models of the universe. Huang’s research focuses on studying the solution space of the Einstein field equations and how physical quantities, such as the total energy, linear momentum, center of mass, and angular momentum, interact with the geometry of the solutions. Her projects also include several educational activities that will train a range of students in the field of geometric analysis and related areas.”
Read more at UConn Today.
January 14, 2015
Richard D. Schafer, Head of the UConn Department of Mathematics from 1953 to 1959, and Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at MIT, passed away on December 28, 2014. Schafer received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1942, and then served in the U.S. Naval Reserve until 1945. Subsequently, he spent time at IAS and at UPenn, before moving on to UConn and then MIT. His research was in non-associative algebras. He was the spouse of Alice T. Schafer, a founder of the AWM, for whom is named the Schafer Prize.
Read the full obituary from the Boston Globe.