News

News

Professor Rachel Roberts Receives an NSF Grant for Collaborative Research on Taut Foliations and Contact Topology

9.19.16

Contact and symplectic topology are branches of mathematics that are motivated by Physics, specifically by classical mechanics and thermodynamics. This National Science Foundation funded project seeks to extend the application of physical phenomena to the study of three-dimensional topology.

Assistant Professor Job Opening

8.30.16

The Mathematics Department of Washington University in St. Louis, MO, has two openings for tenure track Assistant Professor in mathematics, to begin August 2017.

John Shareshian receives NSF Grant

8.22.16

John Shareshian studies problems in combinatorics that arise in or have consequences for other fi elds of mathematics. There are close connections between combinatorics and other fi elds of mathematics in which non-discrete objects are studied, including topology and geometry. The work of Shareshian involves the close study of such connections, with the aim of solving problems about both discrete and non-discrete structures.

National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant for Math Department's John McCarthy

4.22.16

John McCarthy has received a five-year grant from the National Science Foundation to study Operator Theory and Applications. He will study problems in operator theory, function theory, and in non-commutative functions.

WHOA-PSI

3.31.16

The Workshop on Higher-Order Asymptotics and Post-Selection Inference (WHOA-PSI) will take place September 30 - October 2, 2016 on the campus of Washington University in St. Louis.

Mathematics Meets Music

3.9.16

At the most recent American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting, Chair of the Mathematics Department David Wright contributed to the topic of Mathematics and Music.

Holmes receives NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship

2.22.16

Irina Holmes, currently a Hale Postdoctoral Fellow at Georgia Tech, received an NSF postdoctoral fellowship for her work in Harmonic Analysis. She will spend 2016-2018 at Washington University, working with sponsoring scientist Brett Wick.

Pascoe receives NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship

2.22.16

James E. Pascoe, William Chauvenet Lecturer at Washington University, received an NSF postdoctoral fellowship for his work in Operator Theory and several complex variables. He will be a Fellow for 2016-2019. His research specialty is in non-commutative function theory, and he will work with sponsoring scientist John McCarthy.

IWOTA 2016

1.12.16

The International Workshop on Operator Theory and its Applications (IWOTA) will take place July 18-22, 2016 on the campus of Washington University in St. Louis.