Saturday, March 21, 2009

Fields medal


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fields medal

Britannica online encyclopedia article on Fields Medal (award), award granted to between two and four mathematicians for outstanding or seminal research. The Fields Medal is often
The Fields Medals are commonly regarded as mathematics' closest analog to the Nobel Prize (which does not exist in mathematics), and are awarded every four years by the
The mathematical equivalent of the Nobel Prize (there is no Nobel Prize in mathematics) which is awarded by the International Mathematical Union every four years to one or more
International Mathematical Union (IMU) The Fields Medal is awarded every four years on the occasion of the International Congress of Mathematicians to recognize
John Charles Fields ' Will established the Fields Medal, which has played the role of the Nobel Prize in Mathematics. The International Congress of Mathematicians at Zurich in
The history of the Fields Medal begins in the Committee of the International Congress set up by the University of Toronto in November of 1923
Fields Medal Winners. The Fields Medal, considered the Nobel Prize of math, has been awarded quadrennially since 1936 by the International Congress of Mathematicians to recognize
The Fields Medal is a prize given to two, three, or four people who study math who are not over 40 years of age at each International Congress of the International Mathematical
Fields Medal. John Charles Fields (1863-1932) was a Canadian mathematician, educated in Toronto, Paris, and Berlin. He spent the bulk of his academic career at The University of
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