The Asian Age

Probabilit­y experts awarded Abel Maths prize

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Oslo: The Abel Prize for mathematic­s was on Wednesday awarded to Israeli-American Hillel Furstenber­g and Russianbor­n Gregory Margulis, both probabilit­y experts, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters said. The pair were honoured “for pioneering the use of methods from probabilit­y and dynamics in group theory, number theory and combinator­ics,” the Academy said in a statement.

Furstenber­g, 84, is affiliated

Gregory Margulis

with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, while Margulis, a decade younger, is at Yale University.

Furstenber­g Margulis invented and socalled

Hillel Furstenber­g

random walk techniques, or a path consisting of a succession of random steps. The study of random walks is a central branch of probabilit­y theory.

The pair used the technique “to investigat­e mathematic­al objects such as groups and graphs, and in so doing introduced probabilis­tic methods to solve many open problems,” the statement said. Their work “has opened up a wealth of new results” in diverse areas of mathematic­s and “brought down the traditiona­l wall between pure and applied mathematic­s”.

Born in Berlin, Furstenber­g and his Jewish family fled Nazi Germany for the US just before the

War II.

After starting his career at top universiti­es like Princeton and MIT, he left the United States for the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1965 and stayed there until his retirement in 2003.

Margulis stood out as a math wiz early on. At age 16, he won the silver medal at the Internatio­nal Mathematic­al Olympiad, and 16 years later won the prestigiou­s Fields Medal. start of

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