Page 39 - 8th European Congress of Mathematics. 20-26 June 2021. Presentation of Plenary, Invited, Public, Abel and Prize Speakers at the 8ECM.
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The EMS Prizes
Alexandr Logunov
Princeton University
Alexander Logunov specializes in harmonic analysis,
potential theory, and geometric analysis. He works at
Princeton University.
Assist. Prof. Logunov received, jointly with Eugenia Malinnikova, the 2017
Clay Research Award for their introduction of novel geometric-combinatorial
methods for the study of elliptic eigenvalue problems, leading to the
solution of long-standing problems in spectral geometry.
Among other results, he proved an estimate (from above) for Hausdorff
measures on the zero sets of Laplace eigenfunctions defined on compact
smooth manifolds and an estimate (from below) in harmonic analysis and
differential geometry that proved conjectures by Shing-Tung Yau and Nikolai
Nadirashvili. In 2018 he received the Salem Prize for his work on these
conjectures.
Phan Thành Nam
Department of Mathematics at Ludwig
Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
Phan Thành Nam is a Professor at the Department
of Mathematics at LMU Munich. His research field
is analysis and mathematical physics, in particular in many-body quantum
mechanics, spectral theory, calculus of variations and partial differential
equations and numerical analysis.
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Alexandr Logunov
Princeton University
Alexander Logunov specializes in harmonic analysis,
potential theory, and geometric analysis. He works at
Princeton University.
Assist. Prof. Logunov received, jointly with Eugenia Malinnikova, the 2017
Clay Research Award for their introduction of novel geometric-combinatorial
methods for the study of elliptic eigenvalue problems, leading to the
solution of long-standing problems in spectral geometry.
Among other results, he proved an estimate (from above) for Hausdorff
measures on the zero sets of Laplace eigenfunctions defined on compact
smooth manifolds and an estimate (from below) in harmonic analysis and
differential geometry that proved conjectures by Shing-Tung Yau and Nikolai
Nadirashvili. In 2018 he received the Salem Prize for his work on these
conjectures.
Phan Thành Nam
Department of Mathematics at Ludwig
Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
Phan Thành Nam is a Professor at the Department
of Mathematics at LMU Munich. His research field
is analysis and mathematical physics, in particular in many-body quantum
mechanics, spectral theory, calculus of variations and partial differential
equations and numerical analysis.
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