Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

ADAMS PRIZE

(Redirected from Adams prize)
''See also the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize of the American Historical Society, and not to be confused with the Douglas Adams Prize for homourous writing''
The 'Adams Prize' is awarded each year by the Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge and St John's College to a young, UK based mathematician for first-class international research in the Mathematical Sciences.
The Prize is named after the mathematician John Couch Adams and was endowed by members of St John's College. It was approved by the senate of the university in 1848, to commemorate Adams' discovery of the planet Neptune. Originally open only to Cambridge graduates the current stipulation is that the mathematician must be resident in the UK, and under 40 years of age. Each year applications are invited from mathematicians who have worked in a specific area of mathematics. As of 2004 it is worth £15,000, and the prize is awarded in three parts. The first third is paid directly to the candidate, another third to the candidate's institution to fund research expenses, and the final third is paid on publication of a survey paper in the winner's field in a major mathematics journal.
The prize has been awarded to many well known mathematicians including
James Clerk Maxwell and Sir William Hodge. However the first female mathematician to win the prize was only in 2002 when it was awarded to Susan Howson a lecturer at the University of Nottingham for her work on number theory and elliptic curves.

Contents
List of prizewinners

List of prizewinners


There does not currently seem to be an official list of prize winners, and the following partial list is compiled from internet sources (for with biographies on Wikipedia see ):

1850 Robert Peirson

1857 James Clerk Maxwell

1865 Edward Walker

1882 Joseph John Thomson

1871 Isaac Todhunter

1877 Edward John Routh

1883 Joseph John Thomson

1893 John Henry Poynting

1899 Joseph Larmor, Gilbert Thomas Walker (shared)

1901 Hector Munro MacDonald

1907 Ernest William Brown

1909 George Adolphus Schott

1911 Augustus Edward Hough Love

1913 Samuel Bruce McLaren, John William Nicholson (shared)

1915 Geoffrey Ingram Taylor

1917 Sir James Jeans

1919 John William Nicholson

1922 Joseph Proudman

1924 Sir Ralph Fowler

1926 Sir Harold Jeffreys

1928 Sydney Chapman

1930 Abram Samoilovitch Besicovitch

1932 Alan Herries Wilson

1934 Sydney Goldstein

1936 Sir William Hodge

1940 Harold Davenport

1942 Hormasji Jehangir Bhabha

1947-8 John Charles Burkill, Subrahmanyan Chandresekhar, Walter Kurt Hayman, John MacNaughton Whittaker (shared)

1947 Desmond Sawyer (approx)

1949-50 George Keith Batchelor, William Reginald Dean, Leslie Howarth (shared)

1952 Bernhard Hermann Neumann

1955 Harold Gordon Eggleston

1958 Paul Taunton Matthews, Abdus Salam, John Gerald Taylor (shared)

1960 Vasant Shankar Huzurbazar, Walter Laws Smith (shared)

1962 John Robert Ringrose

1964 James Gardner Oldroyd, Owen Larkin Phillips (shared)

1966 Stephen Hawking, Jayant Vishnu Narlikar (shared)

1966 Roger Penrose

1967 Jayant Vishnu Narlikar

1971 Robert Burridge, Leslie John Walpole, John Raymond Willis (shared)

1972 Alan Baker

1973 Christopher Hooley

1975 John Fitch (computer scientist also known asJohn ffitch) and David Barton (joint)

1981 Michael E. McIntyre (shared)

1981 Brian Leslie Norman Kennett (shared) [1]

1983 Martin J Taylor (shared)

1983 Aidan Schofield (shared)

1987 Brian D Ripley

1992 Paul A Glendinning

2000 Sandu Popescu [2]

2001 Susan Howson

2002 David Hobson

2003 Dominic Joyce

2004 Mihalis Dafermos and David Stuart

2005 Jonathan Sherratt [3]

2006 Paul Fearnhead

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.