Canadian mathematician Robert Langlands wins Abel Prize for 2018

Source: Xinhua| 2018-03-21 05:43:47|Editor: Chengcheng
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OSLO, March 20 (Xinhua) -- Canadian mathematician Robert Langlands has been named as the winner of the Abel Prize for 2018 "for his visionary program connecting representation theory to number theory," the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters said Tuesday.

"Langlands' insights were so radical and so rich that the mechanisms he suggested to bridge these mathematical fields led to a project named the Langlands program," the academy said in a statement.

The 81-year-old mathematician will receive the financial award of 6 million Norwegian kroner (776,000 U.S. dollars) from Norway's King Harald V at an award ceremony in Oslo on May 22.

Langlands was born in New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada, in 1936. He graduated from the University of British Columbia with an undergraduate degree in 1957 and an MSc in 1958, and from Yale University of the United States with a PhD in 1960.

He has held faculty positions at Princeton University and Yale University, and is currently a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the United States.

The Abel prize has been awarded annually since 2003 to one or more outstanding mathematicians in memory of the Norwegian mathematics genius Niels Henrik Abel.

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