The AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecture is an award and lecture series that "highlights significant contributions of women to applied or computational mathematics." The Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) planned the award and lecture series in 2002 and first awarded it in 2003. The lecture is normally given each year at the SIAM Annual Meeting. Award winners receive a signed certificate from the AWM and SIAM presidents.
The lectures are named after Sonia Kovalevsky (1850âÂÂ1891), a well-known Russian mathematician of the late 19th century. Karl Weierstrass regarded Kovalevsky as his most talented student. In 1874, she received her Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Göttingen under the supervision of Weierstrass. She was granted privatdozentin status and taught at the Stockholm University in 1883; she became an ordinary professor (the equivalent of full professor) at this institution in 1889. She was also an editor of the journal Acta Mathematica. Kovalevsky did her important work in the theory of partial differential equations and the rotation of a solid around a fixed point.
Recipients
The Kovalevky Lecturers have been:
- 2003 Linda R. Petzold, University of California, Santa Barbara, âÂÂTowards the Multiscale Simulation of Biochemical NetworksâÂÂ
- 2004 Joyce R. McLaughlin, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, âÂÂInterior Elastodynamics Inverse Problems: Creating Shear Wave Speed Images of TissueâÂÂ
- 2005 Ingrid Daubechies, Princeton University, âÂÂSuperfast and (Super)sparse AlgorithmsâÂÂ
- 2006 Irene Fonseca, Carnegie Mellon University, âÂÂNew Challenges in the Calculus of VariationsâÂÂ
- 2007 Lai-Sang Young, Courant Institute, âÂÂShear-Induced ChaosâÂÂ
- 2008 Dianne P. O'Leary, University of Maryland, âÂÂA Noisy Adiabatic Theorem: Wilkinson Meets SchrödingerâÂÂs CatâÂÂ
- 2009 Andrea Bertozzi, University of California, Los Angeles
- 2010 Suzanne Lenhart, University of Tennessee at Knoxville, âÂÂMixing it up: Discrete and Continuous Optimal Control for Biological ModelsâÂÂ
- 2011 Susanne C. Brenner, Louisiana State University, âÂÂA Cautionary Tale in Numerical PDEsâÂÂ
- 2012 Barbara Keyfitz, Ohio State University, âÂÂThe Role of Characteristics in Conservation LawsâÂÂ
- 2013 Margaret Cheney, Colorado State University, âÂÂIntroduction to Radar ImagingâÂÂ
- 2014 Irene M. Gamba, University of Texas at Austin, âÂÂThe evolution of complex interactions in non-linear kinetic systemsâÂÂ
- 2015 Linda J. S. Allen, Texas Tech University, âÂÂPredicting Population ExtinctionâÂÂ
- 2016 Lisa J. Fauci, Tulane University, âÂÂBiofluids of Reproduction: Oscillators, Viscoelastic Networks and Sticky SituationsâÂÂ
- 2017 Liliana Borcea, University of Michigan, âÂÂMitigating Uncertainty in Inverse Wave ScatteringâÂÂ
- 2018 Eva Tardos, Cornell University, âÂÂLearning and Efficiency of Outcomes in GamesâÂÂ
- 2019 Catherine Sulem, University of Toronto, âÂÂThe Dynamics of Ocean WavesâÂÂ
- 2020 Bonnie Berger, MIT, âÂÂCompressive genomics: leveraging the geometry of biological dataâÂÂ
- 2021 Vivette Girault, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, "From linear poroelasticity to nonlinear implicit elastic and related models"
- 2022 Anne Greenbaum, University of Washington, "Two of my Favorite ProblemsâÂÂ
- 2023 Annalisa Buffa, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), "Simulation of PDEs on Geometries Obtained via Boolean Operations"
- 2024 SunÃÂica ÃÂaniÃÂ, University of California at Berkeley, "Mathematics for Bioartificial Organ Design"
- 2025 Yongjie Jessica Zhang, Carnegie Mellon University, TBD
See also
References
External links