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2024 Baddoo Community Awards

Steven Johnson, Mehrab Jamee, Paige Bright, and Daniel Santiago-Alvarez
Top from left: Steven Johnson, Mehrab Jamee, Paige Bright, and Daniel Santiago-Alvarez;
Bottom from left: Tang-Kai Lee, Catherine Wolfram, Keaton Naff, and Michel Goemans

Several math community members received the 2024 Peter Baddoo Community Building Award, for individuals who have made significant contributions to building and strengthening our MIT Math community.

At the Senior Dinner on May 8, Paige Bright was awarded for her Department volunteering efforts, PRIMES Circle outreach, and TA work. Mehrab Jamee was recognized for his work as Undergraduate Math Association president, including organizing social events and academic talks, creating math course resources and Putnam practice sessions, and overseeing the distribution of the popular UMA hoodies. Daniel Santiago-Alvarez was praised for increasing undergrad involvement in DEI, and running panels, mentorship workshops, and coffee chats.

At the May 22 Spring Social, graduate student recipients were Tang-Kai Lee, for dedication to his role as TA for 18.02 and 18.06; and Catherine Wolfram, for her efforts as a TA in 18.600. Instructor Keaton Naff was recognized for his leadership in sections such as 18.100P. All three recipients are actively involved in organizations including the Geometric Analysis Reading seminar and DRP.

This award is named in honor of the late Department instructor Peter Baddoo, who received the Community Building Award in 2022 for organizing tea and coffee hours for the postdoc community.

Congratulations, Catherine, Daniel, Keaton, Mehrab, Paige, and Tang-Kai!

Saba Lepsveridze and Frank Wang Receive Bucsela Prizes

Saba Lepsveridze and Frank Wang
From left, Saba Lepsveridze and Frank Wang

The 2024 Jon A. Bucsela Prize in Mathematics has been awarded to senior math majors Saba Lepsveridze and Frank Wang for distinguished scholastic achievement, professional promise, and enthusiasm for mathematics.

Congratulations, Frank and Saba!

2024 Housman Teaching and Learning Awards

Top from left: Yiming Chen and Katie Miner with Steven Johnson;
Bottom from left: Alex Pieloch, Ryan Chen, Thomas Rüd, and Bill Minicozzi, and Jonathan Zung.

The 2024 Charles and Holly Housman Award for Excellence in Teaching goes to seniors Yiming Chen (TA for courses including 6.122 and 18.800) and Katie Miner (18.02 TA); to graduate student Ryan Chen (TA for 18.06); and to instructors Alex Pieloch (18.901 fall 2023, 18.03 spring 2024), Thomas Rüd (18.01A and 18.02A fall 2023, 18.781 spring 2024) and Jonathan Zung (18.904 fall 2023, 18.900 spring 2024).

Undergraduate awards were presented at the Senior Dinner on May 8, and graduate, postdoc, and instructor awards at the Spring Social on May 22.

Congratulations, Alex, Jonathan, Katie, Ryan, Thomas, and Yiming!

Davis Evans Earns Benney Prize

Davis Evans holding Benney Prize

Graduate student Davis Evans is the recipient of the David J. Benney Prize.

This award recognizes excellence in applied mathematics, with preference given to students in physical applied math, computational science, numerical analysis, computational biology, or theoretical physics. Davis is a PhD candidate working on hydrodynamic quantum analogues in John Bush’s lab.

This award honors David Benney, an applied math professor who died in 2015. Benney chaired the Applied Mathematics Committee from 1983-1985, and served as Department Head for two terms, 1989-1999.

Congratulations, Davis!

Calder Morton-Ferguson and Kai Zhe Zheng Receive Johnson Prize

Calder Morton-Ferguson and Kai Zhe Zheng
From left: Calder Morton-Ferguson and Kai Zhe Zheng

The 2024 Charles W. and Jennifer C. Johnson Prize, for a research paper accepted for publication in a major journal, has been awarded to graduate student Calder Morton-Ferguson for his paper "Symplectic Fourier-Deligne transforms on G/U and the algebra of braids and ties," in International Mathematics Research Notices, April 2024, and to Kai Zhe Zheng for his paper “Near Optimal Alphabet-Soundness Tradeoff PCPs” in Electronic Colloquium on Computational Complexity, Report No. 27, 2024.

Congratulations, Calder and Kai Zhe!

Phi Beta Kappa Inducts 54 Mathematics Seniors

Phi Beta Kappa Logo

The Xi Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa has elected 54 mathematics majors, among 127 electees from MIT's Class of 2024, to become members.

Founded in 1776, Phi Beta Kappa is the nation’s oldest academic honor society. Membership is awarded to students in recognition of excellent academic records and commitment to the objectives of a liberal education. The annual Phi Beta Kappa lecture and initiation ceremony is May 29, during MIT’s Commencement week.

Full list of Mathematics Inductees

Congratulations to our newest members of Phi Beta Kappa!

Ben Lou and Kenta Suzuki Receive Goldwater Scholarships

Ben Lou Kenta Suzuki

Third-years Ben Lou and Kenta Suzuki each received a Barry Goldwater Scholarship for the 2024-2025 academic year.

Ben is majoring in physics and math with a minor in philosophy. Under the mentorship of the LIGO Group’s Nergis Mavalvala, dean of the School of Science, and graduate student Hudson Loughlin, he is working on research to advance the field of quantum measurement, with potential applications including quantum gravity. He thanks his advisors Janet Conrad from Physics and Thomas Rüd from Math. He also acknowledges support from Math’s Elijah Bodish and Roman Bezrukavnikov; Physics’ Alan Guth, Barton Zwiebach, and Richard Price; and David W. Brown of the San Diego Math Circle.

An alum of the PRIMES and SPUR programs, Kenta is a math major who works with Roman on research at the intersection of number and representation theory, using geometric methods to represent p-adic groups. Kenta says he was also inspired to research representation theory by Zhiwei Yun and Wei Zhang.

They were among 438 U.S. college students selected on the basis of academic merit.

Congratulations, Ben and Kenta!

Read more in the MIT News.

Dor Minzer and Kai Zhe Zheng to Receive STOC 2024 Best Paper Award

Dor Minzer Kai Zhe Zheng

Assistant Professor Dor Minzer and graduate student Kai Zhe Zheng will be receiving a Best Paper Award at the June 24-28 Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 2024).

In their paper, Dor and Kai provide a near-optimal trade-off for so-called 2-prover 1-round games, which are crucial to proving strong inapproximability results.

Dor and others from our Department and MIT have other papers that have been accepted at the symposium. The symposium is the flagship conference of ACM’s SIGACT (Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory).

Congratulations, Dor and Kai!

Andre Lee Dixon Selected for School of Science Infinite Mile Award

The School of Science has selected Mathematics Program Coordinator André Lee Dixon as one of the recipients of the 2024 Infinite Mile Award!

“I have been consistently struck by the level of initiative and passion André brings to work,” says his nominator, John Urschel PhD ’21.

Infinite Mile Award winners are nominated by colleagues for going above and beyond in their roles at the Institute.

Congratulations, André!

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