Qiu Chengtong 1
Qiu Chengtong, a Chinese American, was born in Jiaoling County, Meizhou City, Guangdong Province. 1949 was born in Shantou, Guangdong Province. He is the first Chinese winner of the Fields Medal, an internationally renowned mathematician, an academician of the National Academy of Sciences, an academician of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a foreign academician of the China Academy of Sciences. Qiu Chengtong proved Calabi conjecture, positive mass conjecture and so on, and was the founder of the discipline of geometric analysis.
Qiu Chengtong has won the veblen Prize in Geometry (198 1), Fields Prize (1982), MacArthur Prize (1985), Crawford Prize (1994) and National Science Award (/kloc-0).
2. Tao Zhexuan
Tao Zhexuan (1975) was born in Adelaide, Australia. He is a mathematician in China, a fellow of the Royal Society, a foreign fellow of the National Academy of Sciences and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Tao Zhexuan is a master mathematician in the fields of harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, combinatorial mathematics, analytic number theory and algebraic number theory.
He announced on 20 15 that he proved the existence of the Erdos difference problem, which was put forward by Paul Erdos in 1932 and puzzled the academic circles for more than 80 years.
Introduction of Fields Prize
Fields-Medal, also known as Fields Prize, is an international mathematics prize established at the request of Canadian mathematician John-Charles-Fields. It was first awarded in 1936. Fields Prize is one of the highest international prizes in the field of mathematics. Because there is no mathematics prize in the Nobel Prize, it is called "Nobel Prize in Mathematics".
The Fields Prize is awarded every four years, and an award ceremony is held at the quadrennial international congress of mathematicians sponsored by the International Mathematical Federation, and 2 to 4 mathematicians with outstanding contributions are awarded each time. Winners must be under 40 years old before New Year's Day of that year.
By 2023, 60 mathematicians around the world have won the Fields Prize. The universities with the largest number of winners in the world are Harvard University (18), Paris University/13th National Congress (16), Princeton University (15), Paris Teachers College (14) and University of California, Berkeley (14).
The above contents refer to Baidu Encyclopedia-Fields Prize.