The Guardian (USA)

Fields medal: Kyiv-born professor and Oxford expert among winners

- Nicola Davis and Ian Sample

A Ukrainian mathematic­ian who proved the best way to pack spheres in eight dimensions to take up the least space, and an Oxford expert who has solved conundrums in the spacing of prime numbers, are among the winners of the Fields medal, considered the equivalent of a Nobel prize for mathematic­s.

The winners of the prize, presented at the Internatio­nal Mathematic­al Union awards ceremony in Helsinki, have been announced as Prof James Maynard 35, from Oxford University, Prof Maryna Viazovska, 37, of the École polytechni­que fédérale de Lausanne, Hugo Duminil-Copin, 36, of the University of Geneva and Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiq­ues, and June Huh, 39, of Princeton University.

While the first Fields medal was awarded in 1936, there was a hiatus until 1950, since when it has been presented every four years to up to four mathematic­ians who are under 40.

Viazovska, who was born and grew up in Kyiv, is only the second woman to receive the award, after the win by Iranian mathematic­ian Maryam Mirzakhani who became a medalist in 2014. Mirzzakhan­i died of breast cancer in 2017.

Talking to the Guardian from his hotel room in Helsinki, Maynard – who is expecting the birth of his baby imminently – said he learned of his win while up a ladder tackling house renovation­s.

“I was grabbing my phone to use it as a torch to help to see if I had messed the painting up or not. And I noticed that had I got a email then from the IMU president asking to have a zoom call,” he said. “When I got that email, I suspected what it might mean.”

Maynard’s citation points to his “spectacula­r contributi­ons in analytic number theory” – among them his work on the distributi­on of prime numbers.

“Prime numbers are like the atoms for mathematic­ians,” said Maynard. “In the same way that you can understand an awful lot about chemicals by knowing the atoms that make them up, you can understand the huge amount about whole numbers and how they interact with multiplica­tion – which turns out to be very important for things like cryptograp­hy – if you understand things about prime numbers.”

A key step in trying to understand prime numbers, said Maynard, is to look at the size of the gaps between them. Maynard has made a number of breakthrou­ghs, including showing that sometimes prime numbers come unusually close together and sometimes unusually far apart.

Prof Andrew Granville, a former mentor, said that when Maynard made an early pivotal discovery in how often pairs of prime numbers occur that are two steps apart – such as three and five – Graville told the young mathematic­ian he must have made a mistake. But Maynard had not.

“It was a real shock,” said Granville. “And the thing is, he’s not a one horse wonder … James has approached one [question] after another and just made massive headway.”

Granville also praised the work of Viazovska, who solved the problem of the densest way to pack spheres in eight dimensions and, working with others, 24 dimensions.

As Granville notes, the conundrum had its origins in Elizabetha­n England, when Sir Walter Raleigh wondered how to work out the number of cannonball­s in a pile. This was solved by Raleigh’s assistant Thomas Harriot who then began pondering how spheres can be packed to take up the least space. The answer, according to Renaissanc­e astronomer Johannes Kepler, was a pyramid pattern – such as that seen on an orange stand. However, his conjecture was proved only in recent years, and relied on tens of thousands of lines of computer code.

Viazovska, said Granville, took the question even further, finding the solution in higher dimensions. “It turns out that in dimensions eight and 24, the solution is much easier than our common dimension, three,” Viazovska said in 2018.

Peter Sarnak, professor of mathematic­s at Princeton and also at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, welcomed Viazovska’s win.

“Viazovska invents fresh and unexpected tools that allow her to jump over natural barriers that have held us back for years,” he said.

Duminil-Copin’s work by contrast, involves the mathematic­al theory of phase transition­s – for example when ice melts to liquid water – in statistica­l physics.

According Plus Magazine, Huh was more interested in poetry than maths at school, but became hooked on maths after attending lectures by Heisuke Hironaka. Among his work, Huh and colleague Petter Brändén found a connection between mathematic­al models for optimising situations involving variables that are related in a continuous way, and those where the relationsh­ips are discrete.

“Finding this formal bridge was very satisfying.” Huh told the magazine. “And what was even more pleasant for us is that once you have this bridge you can approach problems that were considered very technical and difficult in a very natural and easy way.”

 ?? Photograph: Matteo ?? Maryna Viazovska, only the second woman to receive the award.
Photograph: Matteo Maryna Viazovska, only the second woman to receive the award.
 ?? Photograph: Ryan Cowan ?? James Maynard: ‘Prime numbers are like the atoms for mathematic­ians.’
Photograph: Ryan Cowan James Maynard: ‘Prime numbers are like the atoms for mathematic­ians.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States