Dubai Telegraph - Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields maths medal

EUR -
AED 4.255899
AFN 72.432944
ALL 95.975736
AMD 435.816867
ANG 2.074448
AOA 1062.670738
ARS 1619.00736
AUD 1.664418
AWG 2.08594
AZN 1.965411
BAM 1.956316
BBD 2.328224
BDT 141.837422
BGN 1.980843
BHD 0.437657
BIF 3428.619402
BMD 1.158856
BND 1.478997
BOB 7.988142
BRL 6.101215
BSD 1.15601
BTN 108.040972
BWP 15.796236
BYN 3.442123
BYR 22713.57276
BZD 2.324923
CAD 1.593809
CDF 2634.079447
CHF 0.912802
CLF 0.026896
CLP 1062.021594
CNY 7.973508
CNH 7.993474
COP 4302.147686
CRC 539.144574
CUC 1.158856
CUP 30.709677
CVE 110.294576
CZK 24.480538
DJF 205.855201
DKK 7.471357
DOP 68.598395
DZD 153.754179
EGP 61.083375
ERN 17.382836
ETB 180.492
FJD 2.575846
FKP 0.865723
GBP 0.865196
GEL 3.146334
GGP 0.865723
GHS 12.646391
GIP 0.865723
GMD 84.596598
GNF 10132.71714
GTQ 8.854374
GYD 241.844852
HKD 9.068017
HNL 30.597205
HRK 7.534884
HTG 151.410602
HUF 390.142677
IDR 19561.832769
ILS 3.618985
IMP 0.865723
INR 108.642205
IQD 1514.39956
IRR 1523953.258404
ISK 143.790433
JEP 0.865723
JMD 182.078825
JOD 0.821607
JPY 183.961977
KES 150.191349
KGS 101.3402
KHR 4632.242159
KMF 492.513609
KPW 1042.936742
KRW 1735.867428
KWD 0.35505
KYD 0.96335
KZT 557.168924
LAK 24847.663027
LBP 103523.360316
LKR 363.007342
LRD 211.546727
LSL 19.601456
LTL 3.4218
LVL 0.70098
LYD 7.399984
MAD 10.804997
MDL 20.218422
MGA 4811.290172
MKD 61.619088
MMK 2433.167084
MNT 4135.923012
MOP 9.326861
MRU 46.146374
MUR 53.891919
MVR 17.904411
MWK 2004.13742
MXN 20.722312
MYR 4.585017
MZN 74.062945
NAD 19.59968
NGN 1592.476153
NIO 42.541408
NOK 11.233374
NPR 172.865355
NZD 1.98862
OMR 0.445586
PAB 1.15601
PEN 4.021461
PGK 4.991338
PHP 69.408484
PKR 322.693232
PLN 4.27397
PYG 7554.02565
QAR 4.227234
RON 5.094316
RSD 117.444213
RUB 93.641229
RWF 1690.053196
SAR 4.350082
SBD 9.330779
SCR 16.087553
SDG 696.472444
SEK 10.811603
SGD 1.483057
SHP 0.869442
SLE 28.449668
SLL 24300.638259
SOS 660.677164
SRD 43.267618
STD 23985.974368
STN 24.506572
SVC 10.114625
SYP 128.606968
SZL 19.594254
THB 37.747988
TJS 11.045462
TMT 4.055995
TND 3.406714
TOP 2.790246
TRY 51.392106
TTD 7.847393
TWD 37.073181
TZS 2978.258958
UAH 50.757111
UGX 4364.170274
USD 1.158856
UYU 47.102631
UZS 14093.718494
VES 529.022698
VND 30543.961084
VUV 138.434854
WST 3.185549
XAF 656.132945
XAG 0.016646
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.131866
XCG 2.083341
XDR 0.816019
XOF 656.132945
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.560932
ZAR 19.76266
ZMK 10431.128864
ZMW 22.397006
ZWL 373.15108
  • NGG

    -0.0500

    82.04

    -0.06%

  • GSK

    0.1450

    52.135

    +0.28%

  • CMSD

    0.0816

    22.74

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    -1.2100

    84.64

    -1.43%

  • BTI

    -0.2350

    57.685

    -0.41%

  • BCE

    0.0650

    25.82

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -0.7900

    183.35

    -0.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    15.97

    +3.94%

  • JRI

    0.0150

    11.72

    +0.13%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    -0.7150

    71.145

    -1%

  • BP

    0.7450

    44.325

    +1.68%

  • CMSC

    0.2300

    22.88

    +1.01%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    14.505

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    -0.9600

    32.86

    -2.92%

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

Ukrainian becomes second woman to win Fields maths medal

Ukraine's Maryna Viazovska paid tribute to those suffering in her war-torn country on Tuesday when 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 maths professor, received the prestigious award alongside three other winners at a ceremony in Helsinki.

"I am from Kyiv, Ukraine, and in February my life changed forever" when Moscow invaded, she said in a video displayed at the ceremony.

"Not only for me but for everyone in the world and especially the people in my country," she said, adding that her two sisters had been evacuated from Kyiv.

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

The International Congress of Mathematicians, the event 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 at the choice of the host city, and after Moscow invaded Ukraine 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".

- 'Sad and angry' -

Viazovska was born in 1984 in Ukraine and has been chair of number theory at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne since 2018.

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

"Her dream was to raise this new generation of scientist, doctors, teachers," Viazovska told AFP.

"The fact that these dreams will not be realised, it's terrible. We could just think of what kind of great future we could have had and what the war is robbing us of."

She felt "very sad and angry" and "feels a lot of pain every time I read the news", she added.

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

He proposed that the most compact way to pack spheres was in a pyramid, like oranges at a supermarket.

It was such a complex problem that it was not considered proved correct in the third dimension 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, and later also solved it in the 24th dimension.

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".

The only previous female laureate in the prize's 86-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 hoped Viazovska's win "will contribute to inspiring more women to choose mathematics as a career".

- 'Express the inexpressible' -

Duminil-Copin, 36, is a professor at both the University of Geneva and the French Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques.

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".

Du Sautoy said that even though prime numbers "get rarer and rarer as you count through the universe of numbers", his Oxford colleague had been "able to show that infinitely often you'll see two primes close together".

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

He is one of the rare Fields winner not to have focussed 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."

A.Padmanabhan--DT