The Japan Times - Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields math medal

EUR -
AED 4.39647
AFN 79.010777
ALL 96.7817
AMD 453.834235
ANG 2.142963
AOA 1097.770504
ARS 1728.714548
AUD 1.697422
AWG 2.154839
AZN 2.03606
BAM 1.959479
BBD 2.410826
BDT 146.2646
BGN 2.010429
BHD 0.451359
BIF 3555.483592
BMD 1.197133
BND 1.514243
BOB 8.270527
BRL 6.218144
BSD 1.196947
BTN 110.127756
BWP 15.609305
BYN 3.381248
BYR 23463.797441
BZD 2.40732
CAD 1.614512
CDF 2702.527156
CHF 0.914657
CLF 0.026043
CLP 1028.337353
CNY 8.318156
CNH 8.313415
COP 4373.125105
CRC 592.211831
CUC 1.197133
CUP 31.724012
CVE 110.884406
CZK 24.328187
DJF 212.75416
DKK 7.467485
DOP 75.419599
DZD 154.65435
EGP 56.059366
ERN 17.956988
ETB 186.200377
FJD 2.621956
FKP 0.868641
GBP 0.866784
GEL 3.226251
GGP 0.868641
GHS 13.114581
GIP 0.868641
GMD 88.00166
GNF 10476.106643
GTQ 9.184243
GYD 250.420144
HKD 9.344996
HNL 31.588305
HRK 7.535923
HTG 156.894557
HUF 380.549872
IDR 20097.400931
ILS 3.704161
IMP 0.868641
INR 109.934056
IQD 1568.04388
IRR 50429.2077
ISK 144.996855
JEP 0.868641
JMD 187.812603
JOD 0.848796
JPY 183.318702
KES 154.514154
KGS 104.688869
KHR 4816.661042
KMF 493.218172
KPW 1077.499653
KRW 1713.586906
KWD 0.366789
KYD 0.997473
KZT 601.288873
LAK 25747.338611
LBP 102474.544325
LKR 370.335275
LRD 221.435728
LSL 18.885656
LTL 3.534821
LVL 0.724134
LYD 7.519117
MAD 10.83945
MDL 20.132798
MGA 5357.167785
MKD 61.629467
MMK 2514.472536
MNT 4270.0428
MOP 9.623167
MRU 47.746641
MUR 54.05048
MVR 18.507873
MWK 2075.496582
MXN 20.615098
MYR 4.704817
MZN 76.329328
NAD 18.885656
NGN 1661.703631
NIO 44.052706
NOK 11.415096
NPR 176.204811
NZD 1.969152
OMR 0.460301
PAB 1.196947
PEN 4.002915
PGK 5.201766
PHP 70.529025
PKR 334.819598
PLN 4.205952
PYG 8032.0796
QAR 4.363392
RON 5.097505
RSD 117.394378
RUB 90.079313
RWF 1746.378689
SAR 4.490097
SBD 9.670049
SCR 16.594223
SDG 720.018515
SEK 10.539112
SGD 1.512703
SHP 0.898159
SLE 29.091786
SLL 25103.269553
SOS 682.882058
SRD 45.495226
STD 24778.226215
STN 24.546083
SVC 10.473663
SYP 13239.776792
SZL 18.879445
THB 37.386326
TJS 11.179589
TMT 4.189964
TND 3.427835
TOP 2.882408
TRY 52.027807
TTD 8.124253
TWD 37.561827
TZS 3070.644609
UAH 51.226874
UGX 4257.99405
USD 1.197133
UYU 45.295038
UZS 14565.345295
VES 429.143458
VND 31125.445585
VUV 143.139968
WST 3.252382
XAF 657.190824
XAG 0.010137
XAU 0.00022
XCD 3.23531
XCG 2.15725
XDR 0.816474
XOF 657.190824
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.394994
ZAR 18.826046
ZMK 10775.631872
ZMW 23.669438
ZWL 385.476184
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0392

    24.09

    +0.16%

  • BCC

    -0.5500

    80.3

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.71

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.43

    -1.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.94

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    85.07

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    14.71

    +0.95%

  • BCE

    0.2200

    25.49

    +0.86%

  • RIO

    1.7600

    95.13

    +1.85%

  • RELX

    -1.2100

    36.17

    -3.35%

  • GSK

    0.5600

    50.66

    +1.11%

  • BTI

    0.0600

    60.22

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    -0.6300

    92.59

    -0.68%

  • BP

    0.3400

    38.04

    +0.89%

Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields math medal
Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields math medal / Photo: Vesa Moilanen - Lehtikuva/AFP

Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields math medal

Ukraine's Maryna Viazovska paid tribute to those suffering in her war-torn country on Tuesday as she became the second woman to be awarded the Fields medal, known as the Nobel prize for mathematics.

Text size:

Viazovska, a 37-year-old Kyiv-born math professor, received the prestigious award alongside three other winners at a ceremony in Helsinki.

"My life changed forever" when Moscow invaded Ukraine in February, she said in a video displayed at the ceremony, adding that her sisters had been evacuated from Kyiv.

"Right now Ukrainians are really paying the highest price for our beliefs and our freedom," she said.

The International Congress of Mathematicians, where the prize is awarded, was initially scheduled to be held in Russia's second city Saint Petersburg -- and opened by President Vladimir Putin.

Earlier in the year hundreds of mathematicians signed an open letter protesting the choice of the host city, and after Moscow invaded Ukraine in late February the event was moved to the Finnish capital.

The other Fields winners were France's Hugo Duminil-Copin of the University of Geneva, Britain's James Maynard of Oxford University and June Huh of Princeton in the United States.

The medal, along with $15,000 Canadian dollars ($11,600), is awarded every four years to between two to four candidates under the age of 40 for "outstanding mathematical achievement".

- 'Tour de force' -

Viazovska was born in 1984 in Ukraine, then still part of the Soviet Union, and has been a professor at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland since 2017.

At the ceremony she paid tribute to Yulia Zdanovska, a young mathematician who studied under the same teachers she had in Kyiv, who was killed by a Russian missile attack on the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv in March.

"Yulia was a person filled with light, and her big dream was teaching mathematics to kids in Ukraine," Viazovska said.

"When someone like her dies, it's like the future dies."

In a decision made before the war in Ukraine began, Viazovska was awarded for her work in sphere packing -- a problem first posed by German astronomer and mathematician Johannes Kepler nearly 400 years ago.

In what is called the Kepler conjecture, he proposed that the most compact way to pack spheres was in a pyramid, like oranges at a supermarket.

But it was such a complex problem that it was not considered proved correct until 1998 via intense computer number-crunching.

Then in 2016, Viazovska solved the problem in the eighth dimension, using what is called an E8 lattice.

Marcus du Sautoy, a British mathematics professor at Oxford University, told AFP it was a surprise when Viazovska came up with such "slick proof" compared to the "tortuous proof needed in three dimensions".

Renaud Coulangeon of Bordeaux University told AFP the solution was a "tour de force".

The only previous female laureate in the prize's more than 80-year history was Iranian mathematician Maryam Mirzakhani, who died of breast cancer in 2017 just three years after winning the award.

Du Sautoy said he hopes Viazovska's win "will contribute to inspiring more women to choose mathematics as a career."

- 'Express the inexpressible' -

Duminil-Copin, born in France in 1985, is a professor at the Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques, focusing on the mathematical branch of statistical physics.

He was honoured for solving "long-standing problems in the probabilistic theory of phase transitions", which, according to the jury, has opened up several new research directions.

Maynard, 35, received the medal "for contributions to analytic number theory, which have led to major advances in the understanding in the structure of prime numbers," Kenig said.

"His work is highly ingenious, often leading to surprising breakthroughs on important problems that seemed to be inaccessible by current techniques," the International Mathematical Union said in a statement.

June Huh, 39, was given the award for "transforming" the field of geometric combinatorics, "using methods of Hodge theory, tropical geometry and singularity theory", the jury said.

He is a rare Fields winner who did not focus on mathematics in his teen years, after a bad elementary school test score convinced him he didn't have a talent for it, he told Quanta Magazine.

"When I was young, math was like a faraway land, surrounded by giant walls that I could not climb," Huh said in his video.

"I grew up in Korea and I dreamed of becoming a poet, to express the inexpressible. I eventually learned that mathematics is a way of doing that."

Y.Ishikawa--JT