2009 Prizes and Awards Luncheon
SIAM Annual Meeting
July 7, 2009

Prizes, awards, and special lectures are shown in alphabetical order.

I. E. Block Community Lecture

The I. E. Block Community Lecture was instituted in 1995 to encourage public appreciation of the excitement and vitality of applied mathematics by reaching out as broadly as possible to students, teachers, and members of the local community, as well as to SIAM members, researchers, and practitioners in fields related to applied and computational mathematics.  The lecture is open to the public and is named in honor of I. Edward Block, a founder of SIAM who served as its Managing Director for nearly 20 years.

2009 Lecturer:    Andrew W. Lo
                          Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Title of Lecture:  "Kill All The Quants"?:  Models vs. Mania In The Current Financial Crisis
                          Wednesday, July 8, 6:15 - 7:15 p.m.
                           Room TBA

Andrew W. Lo is the Harris & Harris Group Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the director of MIT’s Laboratory for Financial Engineering.  He received his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1984, and taught at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School as the W.P. Carey Assistant Professor of Finance from 1984 to 1987, and as the W.P. Carey Associate Professor of Finance from 1987 to 1988.

Previous Lecturers:  

*The I. E. Block Lecture (Phillip A. Griffiths and William F. Ballhaus, Jr.) was merged with the Community Lecture (Charles Van Loan and Brian Rosen) in 1997.

The I. E. Block Community Lecturer receives a $1,500 honorarium and an engraved clock.

 

Ralph E. Kleinman Prize

Established in 1998, the Ralph E. Kleinman Prize is awarded to one individual for outstanding research, or other contributions, that bridge the gap between mathematics and applications.  Work that uses high-level mathematics and/or invents new mathematical tools to solve applied problems from engineering, science, and technology is particularly appropriate.  The value of the work will be measured by the quality of the mathematics and its impact on the application.  Each prize may be given either for a single notable achievement or for a collection of such achievements.

2009 Recipient:            Weinan E
                                   Princeton University

Citation:  For his extraordinary interdisciplinary contributions and for his exemplary record in mentoring students and postdocs.  He has had profound impacts on research in stochastic partial differential equations and turbulence, numerical solution of multiscale problems, dynamics of interacting dislocations, liquid crystals and polymers, metastability, protein folding, gas dynamics, epitaxial growth, micromagnetics, and superconductivity.  His vision and breadth are truly remarkable.

Weinan E received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles, and is currently a Professor in the Department of Mathematics and the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics at Princeton University.  His research interests include multiscale modeling, density functional theory for electronic structure analysis, theory and modeling of rare events with applications in chemistry and material sciences, stochastic partial differential equations, and the mathematical theory of solids, from atomic to macroscopic scales.  Professor E is a member of the American Mathematical Society, American Physical Society, and SIAM.  He is also a Fellow of the Institute of Physics and is among the inaugral class of SIAM Fellows.

Previous Recipients: 

The recipient of the Ralph E. Kleinman Prize receives $5,000 and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecture

Established in 2002, this lecture is given annually at the SIAM Annual Meeting.  The lecture is intended to highlight significant contributions of women to applied or computational mathematics.

2009 Lecturer:    Andrea L. Bertozzi
                         University of California, Los Angeles

Title of Lecture:   A Swarming by Nature and by Design
                         Monday, July 6, 3:00 – 3:30 p.m
                         Room TBA

Citation:  For her mastery of an impressive variety of mathematical methods, ranging from partial differential equation estimates to numerical algorithms.  Her research has made fundamental contributions to fluid dynamics, to nonlinear partial differential equations used in image processing, and to cooperative systems.

Andrea L. Bertozzi is Professor of Mathematics and Director of Applied Mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles.  She received her Ph.D., M.A., and A.B. in Mathematics, all from Princeton University.  She served on the SIAM Council and currently serves on the Board of Trustees of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute and on the editorial boards of several journals.

Previous Lecturers:  

The AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecturer receives a certificate signed by the Presidents of AWM and SIAM.

 

W. T. and Idalia Reid Prize

The W. T. and Idalia Reid Prize in Mathematics was established by SIAM in 1993 to recognize outstanding work in, or other contributions to, the broadly defined areas of differential equations and control theory.  The prize, given annually, may be awarded either for a single notable achievement or a collection of such achievements.  The prize fund was endowed by the late Mrs. Idalia Reid to honor her husband.

2009 Recipient:   Anders Lindquist
                         Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

Title of Lecture:   The Moment Problem for Positive Rational Measures: Convexity in the Spirit of Krein
                         Wednesday, July 8, 3:00 - 3:30 p.m..
                         Room TBA

Citation:  For fundamental contributions to the theory of stochastic systems, signals, and control.

Anders Lindquist received his Ph.D. from the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, where, in 1972, he was appointed a Docent of Optimization and Systems Theory.  He is the Head of the Mathematics Department and the Director of the Strategic Research Center for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (CIAM), both at the Royal Institute of Technology.  He is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, a Foreign Member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), an Honorary Member of the Hungarian Operations Research Society, as well as a member of SIAM.

Previous Recipients: 

Please note: The Reid Prize was awarded every other year until 2000.

The W. T. and Idalia Reid Prize Lecturer receives a cash award of $10,000 and an engraved medal.

 

SIAG/CST Prize

The SIAM Activity Group on Control and Systems Theory Prize (SIAG/CST Prize), established in 1997, is awarded at the SIAM Conference on Control to a young researcher for outstanding research contributions, as determined by the prize committee, to mathematical control or systems theory.  The contributions must be contained in a paper or papers published in English in peer-reviewed journals.

2009 Recipient:   Rafal Goebel
                          Loyola University Chicago

The SIAG/CST Prize Lecture is scheduled as part of the SIAM Conference on Control and Its Applications (CT09).

Title of Lecture:   Hybrid Inclusions: A Framework for Modeling and Analysis of Hybrid Dynamical Systems
                         Monday, July 6, 9:15- 10:00 a.m.
                         Room TBA

Citation:  For his accomplishments in developing novel and fundamental results for in-depth study of hybrid systems and resolving some long-standing issues in these systems such as well-posedness of solutions and robustness of asymptotic stability in hybrid control systems.

Rafal Goebel is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Loyola University Chicago.  He received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Washington in Seattle, and his M.Sc. in Mathematics from the University of Maria Curie Sklodowska in Lublin, Poland.  He held postdoctoral positions in the Departments of Mathematics at the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.  He also held postdoctoral and part-time research positions at the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and held a part-time teaching position in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Washington.  He joined Loyola in 2008.

Previous Recipients:

The recipient of the SIAG/CST Prize receives a plaque and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

SIAG/CST Best SICON Paper Prize

The SIAG/CST Best SICON Paper Prize was established by the SIAM Activity Group on Control and Systems Theory (SIAG/CST) in 2007.  The prize is awarded to the author(s) of the two most outstanding papers, as determined by the prize committee, published in the SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization (SICON) in the two calendar years before the year of the award.

The SIAG/CST Best SICON Paper Prize session, including a short talk by an author of each paper, is scheduled as part of the SIAM Conference on Control and Its Applications (CT09) on Wednesday, July 8, from 9:15 to 10:00 a.m. in a room TBA.

2009 Recipients:   “An Inverse Problem for a Parabolic Variational Inequality with an Integro-
                           Differential Operator"
                           SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, Vol. 47, No. 2 (2008)

                           Author:    Yves Achdou
                                          Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7

                           Citation: This paper formulates and solves a difficult inverse problem arising in
                           stochastic finance.  The author uses sophisticated mathematics to calibrate an
                           options model with observed prices.

 

                           “An Introduction to Quantum Filtering"
                           SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, Vol. 46, No. 6 (2007)

                           Authors:   Luc Bouten
                                          California Institute of Technology

                                          Ramon van Handel
                                          Princeton University

                                          Matthew R. James
                                          The Australian National University

                           Citation: This paper is an in-depth introduction to two of the most important
                           and complex subjects of modern science, nonlinear filtering and quantum
                           mechanics, and it combines mathematical rigor with elegant style.

The prize is awarded for the first time in 2009.

The recipients of the SIAG/CST Best SICON Paper Prize receive a plaque.

 

SIAM Award in the Mathematical Contest in Modeling

The SIAM Award in the Mathematical Contest in Modeling (MCM), established in 1988, is awarded to two of the teams judged “Outstanding” in the annual MCM.  One winning team of students is chosen for each of the problems posed in the MCM.

2009 Recipients:  Problem A, The Continuous Problem: "Designing a Traffic Circle"

                           Solution: "A Simulation-Based Assessment of Traffic Circle Control"
                           Harvard University
                           Department of Mathematics
                           Cambridge, Massachusetts

                           Students: Christopher Chang, Zhou Fan, Yi Sun
                           Faculty Advisor: Professor Clifford H. Taubes

 

                           Problem B, The Discrete Problem: "Energy and the Cell Phone"

                           Solution:  "America's New Calling"
                           Southwestern University
                           Department of Mathematics and Computer Science
                           Georgetown, Texas

                           Students:  Stephen Foster, Bob Potter, Tommy Rogers
                           Faculty Advisor:  Professor Richard Denman

Student recipients each receive $850 (prize and travel) and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate for the students’ schools.

 

SIAM Student Paper Prizes

The SIAM Student Paper Prizes are awarded every year to the student author(s) of the most outstanding paper(s) submitted to the SIAM Student Paper Competition. These awards are based solely on the merit and content of the students’ contribution to the submitted papers. The purpose of the SIAM Student Paper Prizes is to recognize outstanding scholarship by students in applied mathematics or computing.  Papers entered in the competition must already have been submitted for publication.

2009 Recipients Awad H. Al-Mohy
                           The University of Manchester, UK

                           Title:  "A New Scaling and Squaring Algorithm for the Matrix Exponential"
                           Co-Author:  Nicholas J. Higham, The University of Manchester, UK
                          
                           In production for publication in SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and           
                           Applications.

                          Jie Chen
                           University of Minnesota

                           Title:  "On the Tensor SVD and the Optimal Low Rank Orthogonal
                           Approximation of Tensors"
                           Co-Author:  Yousef Saad, University of Minnesota

                           SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Applications
                           Vol. 30, No. 4 (2009)

 

                          Shun Zhang
                           Purdue University��������������� ���������������

                           Title: "Recovery-Based Error Estimator for Interface Problems: Conforming
                           Linear Elements"
                           Co-Author:  Zhiqiang Cai, Purdue University ��������������� ���������������

                            SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis
                           Vol. 47, No. 3 (2009)

Recipients of the SIAM Student Paper Prizes receive $1,550 (prize and travel) and framed, hand-calligraphed certificates.

 

SIAM Prize for Distinguished Service to the Profession

The prize, established in 1985, is in the form of a certificate to be awarded every year at the SIAM Annual Meeting.  It is awarded to an applied mathematician who has made distinguished contributions to the furtherance of applied mathematics on the national level.

2009 Recipient:  J. Tinsley Oden
                        University of Texas at Austin

Citation: In recognition of his tireless service to the applied mathematics and mechanics communities in creating influential agency reports, chartering now vigorous professional associations, sustaining numerous journals, and evolving a prominent institute during the emergence of computational science and engineering.  Tinsley has served academia, national laboratories, industry and professional societies in several countries as educator, consultant, program developer, and reviewer for more than four decades.  A prolific researcher and writer, he injects the perspective of the mathematician -- seeking to understand, quantify, and reduce error in engineering approximations -- in whatever field he enters, and thus he continually expands the scope and relevance of SIAM itself.

J. Tinsley Oden was the founding Director of the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences (ICES) at the University of Texas at Austin, which was created as an expansion of the Texas Institute for Computational and Applied Mathematics, also directed by Dr. Oden for over a decade. He is an author of over 500 scientific publications: books, conference papers, and monographs.  His publications helped establish computational mechanics as a new intellectually rich discipline that was built upon deep concepts in mathematics, computer sciences, physics, and mechanics. Computational Mechanics has since become a fundamentally important discipline throughout the world. He is a Fellow of seven international scientific/technical societies: IACM, AAM, ASME, ASCE, SES, BMIA, and SIAM.  Dr. Oden is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering.

Previous Recipients: 

Note: The SIAM Prize for Distinguished Service to the Profession, previously awarded from time to time, became an annual prize in 2003. No award was made in 2007.

The recipient of the SIAM Prize for Distinguished Service to the Profession receives a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

Theodore von Kármán Prize

The Theodore von Kármán Prize, established in 1968, is awarded for a notable application of mathematics to mechanics and/or the engineering sciences made during the five to ten years preceding the award.  The award may be given either for a single notable achievement or for a collection of such achievements.

2009 Recipient:    Mary F. Wheeler
                          The University of Texas at Austin

Title of Lecture:   Computational Environments for Coupling Multiphase Flow, Transport,
                         and Geomechanics in Porous Media for Modeling Carbon Sequestration
                         Thursday, July 9, 3:00 - 3:30 p.m.
                         Room TBA

Citation:  For her seminal research in numerical methods for partial differential equations, her leadership in the field of scientific computation and service to the scientific community, and her pioneering work in the application of computational methods to the engineering sciences, most notably in the geosciences.  For a generation, she has been at the forefront of efforts forging connections between mathematics and engineering, and between academia and industry.  Over the past decade, she has made fundamental research contributions developing and applying state-of-the art algorithms and computational science tools to problems of societal importance in energy and the environment.

Mary F. Wheeler received her Ph.D. in Mathematics from Rice University and her B.A. and M.A. in Mathematics from The University of Texas at Austin. She was on the faculty of Rice University and the University of Houston before joining the faculty of The University of Texas at Austin, where she is presently Director of the Center for Subsurface Modeling in the Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences. She also is an Affiliated Senior Scientist at the University of Houston.  She has published more than 200 technical reports and refereed journal publications, made over 400 oral presentations and edited eight books.  She has served on ten editorial boards and is a founding member of the SIAM Activity Group in Geosciences.  She was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1998 and currently serves on the Board of Governors for Argonne National Laboratory.  Dr. Wheeler has honorary doctorates from Technische Universiteit, Eindhoven, and the Colorado School of Mines.  She is a Fellow of SIAM.
 
Previous Recipients:

The Theodore von Kármán Lecturer receives a cash prize of $1,000 and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

The John von Neumann Lecture

Established in 1959, this prize is in the form of an honorarium for an invited lecture.  The lecturer will survey and evaluate a significant and useful contribution to mathematics and its applications.  It may be awarded to a mathematician or to a scientist in another field, but, in either case, the recipient should be one who has made distinguished contributions to pure and/or applied mathematics.

2009 Lecturer:    Franco Brezzi
                         IMATI-CNR and IUSS-Pavia

Title of Lecture:   Compatible Discretization of PDEs
                          Tuesday, July 7, 2:30 - 3:30 p.m.
                          Room TBA

Citation: Franco Brezzi is one of the leading computational mathematicians of our day.  His insight, analysis, and exposition have had a profound impact on computational science and engineering.  In particular, his work clarifying the nature of numerical stability and developing tools to devise stable finite element methods has been hugely influential.  It has decisively advanced our ability to simulate a wide variety of physical phenomena including incompressible fluids, flow in porous media, plate and shell structures, and electromagnetics.

Franco Brezzi is Professor of Mathematical Analysis at the Istituto Universitario di Studi Superior (IUSS) of Pavia, Coordinator of the IUSS Ph.D. Program, and President of the Italian Mathematical Union. He also is the Director of the Istituto di Matematica Applicata e Tecnologie Informatiche (IMATI) of Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR).  He received his degree in mathematics from the University of Pavia, Italy.

Previous von Neumann Lecturers:

No awards were made in 1972 and 1973.

The John von Neumann Lecturer receives an honorarium of $4,500 and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

James H. Wilkinson Prize in Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing

The James H. Wilkinson Prize in Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing, established in 1979, is awarded for research in, or other contributions to, numerical analysis and scientific computing during the six years preceding the award.  The purpose of the prize is to stimulate younger contributors and to help them in their careers.

2009 Recipient:   Assyr Abdulle
                          Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland

Title of Lecture:   “Numerical Techniques for Stiff and Multiscale Differential Equations”
                           Friday, July 10, 3:00 - 3:00 p.m.
                           Room TBA

Citation:  For his outstanding contributions in a broad range of fields, including stability analysis and mathematical software for stiff initial value problems, efficient solution algorithms for stochastic differential equations, and error analysis of heterogeneous multiscale methods.
 
Assyr Abdulle is currently Chair of Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis at the Institute of Analysis and Scientific Computing (IACS) at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL).  He earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics from Geneva University in 2001 and completed his first post-doctoral year at Princeton University in the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics, with successive positions at ETH Zurich, the University of Basel, and the University of Edinburgh.  His awards include the SciCADE new talent prize (2005) and an Advanced Research Fellowship by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (2007).  Abdulle’s first major result was the proof of one of Professor Lebedev’s (Russian Academy of Sciences) conjectures in the field of stiff differential equations that had been open for many years.  This result enabled him to develop new numerical methods (known under the acronym ROCK) used by scientists throughout the world for numerous applications.  Another of his fields of expertise is the modeling and numerical analysis of multiscale partial differential equations where he has helped to develop a new framework for the numerical treatment of multiscale problems.  He is also active in the field of stochastic differential equations and recently developed novel numerical methods that hold promise for solving stiff stochastic problems.

Previous recipients:  

The James H. Wilkinson Lecturer receives $1,000 and a framed, hand-calligraphed certificate.

 

SIAM Fellows

The following have been named SIAM Fellows for the Class of 2009.

George E. Andrews  Penn State University
Stuart S. Antman  University of Maryland, College Park
Douglas N. Arnold  University of Minnesota
Michael Artin  Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Richard A. Askey  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Ivo M. Babuska  University of Texas at Austin
John Baillieul  Boston University
Andre D. Bandrauk  Universite de Sherbrooke
H. Thomas Banks  North Carolina State University
Michael N. Barber  Flinders University
John B. Bell  Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Alain Bensoussan  University of Texas at Dallas
Marsha J. Berger  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Peter J. Bickel  University of California, Berkeley
Edward J. Bissett  General Motors Corporation, Retired
I. Edward Block  Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Achi E. Brandt  Weizmann Institute of Science
Richard P. Brent  Australian National University
Roger Ware Brockett  Harvard University
Donald L. Burkholder  University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Christopher I. Byrnes  Washington University
Russel E. Caflisch  University of California, Los Angeles
Peter E. Caines  McGill University
Rene A. Carmona  Princeton University
Margaret Cheney  Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Alexandre J. Chorin  University of California, Berkeley
Philippe G. Ciarlet  City University of Hong Kong and University Pierre et Marie Curie, Emeritus
Hirsh Cohen  The Swartz Foundation
Phillip Colella  Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
William J. Cook  Georgia Institute of Technology
L. Pamela Cook (-Ioannidis)  University of Delaware
Constantine M. Dafermos  Brown University
Ingrid Daubechies  Princeton University
Carl de Boor  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Michel C. Delfour  Université de Montréal
James W. Demmel  University of California, Berkeley
Peter Deuflhard  Zuse Institute Berlin (ZIB) and Freie Universitaet Berlin
Hendrik A. Dijkstra  Utrecht University
Jack J. Dongarra  University of Tennessee Knoxville
David Leigh Donoho  Stanford University
Weinan E  Princeton University
Howard C. Elman  University of Maryland, College Park
Heinz W. Engl  Austrian Academy of Sciences, Johann Radon Institute for Computational and Applied Mathematics (RICAM)
Wendell H. Fleming  Brown University
Roger Fletcher  University of Dundee
Irene Fonseca  Carnegie Mellon University
Avner Friedman  Ohio State University
Paul R. Garabedian  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
C. William Gear  NEC Research Institute
Alan George  University of Waterloo
Graham M. L. Gladwell  University of Waterloo
Leon Glass  McGill University
George J. Gleghorn  TRW Space and Technology, Retired
James G. Glimm  State University of New York at Stony Brook
Roland Glowinski  University of Houston
Israel Gohberg  Tel Aviv University
Martin Golubitsky  Ohio State University
Clóvis Caesar Gonzaga  Federal University of Santa Catarina
Nicholas I. M. Gould  Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Ronald L. Graham  University of California, San Diego
Leslie F. Greengard  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Jerrold R. Griggs  University of South Carolina
Martin Groetschel  Technische Universitaet, Matheon, and Zuse-Zentrum Berlin. Germany
John Guckenheimer  Cornell University
Max D. Gunzburger  Florida State University
Anthony J. Guttmann  The University of Melbourne
Ernst Hairer  Universite de Geneve
Desmond J. Higham  University of Strathclyde
Nicholas J. Higham  The University of Manchester
David J. Hill  The Australian National University
John E. Hopcroft  Cornell University
Thomas Yizhao Hou  California Institute of Technology
Norden E. Huang  National Central University
Thomas J. R. Hughes  University of Texas at Austin
James M. Hyman  Los Alamos National Laboratory
Alfredo Noel Iusem  Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada
Arthur Jaffe  Harvard University
Christopher R. Johnson  University of Utah
David S. Johnson  AT&T Labs - Research
Ellis L. Johnson  Georgia Institute of Technology
Thomas Kailath  Stanford University
Hans G. Kaper  Argonne National Laboratory, Retired
Tasso J. Kaper  Boston University
Richard M. Karp  University of California, Berkeley
Joseph B. Keller  Stanford University
Carl T. Kelley  North Carolina State University
Peter Eris Kloeden  Johann Wolfgang Goethe University
Donald E. Knuth  Stanford University
Robert V. Kohn  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Nancy J. Kopell,  Boston University
Arthur J. Krener  Naval Postgraduate School
Gregory A. Kriegsmann  New Jersey Institute of Technology
Harold W. Kuhn  Princeton University
Harold J. Kushner  Brown University
Peter Lancaster  University of Calgary
Peter D. Lax  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University, Emeritus
Frank Thomson Leighton  Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Simon A. Levin  Princeton University
Adrian S. Lewis  Cornell University
Sven Leyffer  Argonne National Laboratory
Michael C. Mackey  McGill University
Andrew J. Majda  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Thomas A. Manteuffel  University of Colorado at Boulder
Dan Marchesin  Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada
Steven I. Marcus  University of Maryland, College Park
Jerrold E. Marsden  California Institute of Technology
David W. McLaughlin  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Joyce R. McLaughlin  Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Michael J. Miksis  Northwestern University
Graeme W. Milton  University of Utah
Robert M. Miura  New Jersey Institute of Technology
Cleve B. Moler  MathWorks Inc
Cathleen S. Morawetz  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Jorge J. Moré  Argonne National Laboratory
David B. Mumford  Brown University
George L. Nemhauser  Georgia Institute of Technology
Helmut Neunzert  Fraunhofer-Institute
Alan C. Newell  University of Arizona
John R. Ockendon  University of Oxford
J. Tinsley Oden  University of Texas at Austin
Dianne P. O'Leary  University of Maryland, College Park
Robert E. O'Malley, Jr.  University of Washington
Elaine S. Oran  U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
Michael R. Osborne  Australian National University
Stanley J. Osher  University of California, Los Angeles
Michael L. Overton  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Jong-Shi Pang  University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
George C. Papanicolaou  Stanford University
Seymour V. Parter  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Donald W. Peaceman  Exxon Production Research Company, Retired
Robert L. Pego  Carnegie Mellon University
Lambertus A. Peletier  Universiteit Leiden
Alan S. Perelson  Los Alamos National Laboratory
Charles S. Peskin  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Linda R. Petzold  University of California, Santa Barbara
Renzo Piva  Università di Roma "La Sapienza"
Stephen B. Pope  Cornell University
Alfio M. Quarteroni  Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne
Paul H. Rabinowitz  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Henry H. Rachford, Jr.  GL Industrial Services USA, Inc.
Michael B. Ray  ExxonMobil Corporate Strategic Research
Werner C. Rheinboldt  University of Pittsburgh; Emeritus
Stephen M. Robinson  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Vladimir Rokhlin  Yale University
Murray Rosenblatt  University of California, San Diego
Ulrich J. Ruede  Universitat Erlangen
Robert D. Russell  Simon Fraser University
Donald G. Saari  University of California, Irvine
J. M. Sanz-Serna  Universidad de Valladolid and Real Academia de Ciencia
Alexander Schrijver  Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica
James A. Sethian  University of California, Berkeley
David H. Sharp  Los Alamos National Laboratory
Michael J. Shelley  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Chi-Wang Shu  Brown University
William A. Sirignano  University of California, Irvine
Ian H. Sloan  University of New South Wales and Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Eduardo D. Sontag  Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Ivar Stakgold  University of Delaware, Emeritus
G. W. Stewart  University of Maryland, College Park
Gilbert Strang  Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Walter A. Strauss  Brown University
Steven H. Strogatz  Cornell University
Andrew M. Stuart  Warwick University
Trevor Stuart  Imperial College of Science, Technology & Medicine
Hector J. Sussmann  Rutgers University
Harry Swinney  University of Texas at Austin
William W. Symes  Rice University
Richard A. Tapia  Rice University
Eva Tardos  Cornell University
Robert E. Tarjan  Princeton University
Roger M. Temam  Indiana University
Prasad V. Tetali  Georgia Institute of Technology
Michael J. Todd  Cornell University
Philippe L. Toint  The University of Namur
Carlos Tomei  Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Philippe Tondeur  University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Salvatore Torquato  Princeton University
Joseph F. Traub  Columbia University
Lloyd N. Trefethen  University of Oxford
Henk A. Van Der Vorst  Utrecht University
Paul M. Van Dooren  Université catholique de Louvain
Charles Van Loan  Cornell University
Srinivasa R. S. Varadhan  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University
Grace Wahba  University of Wisconsin-Madison
Michael S. Waterman  University of Southern California
Burton Wendroff  Los Alamos National Laboratory
Mary F. Wheeler  University of Texas at Austin
Forman A. Williams  University of California, San Diego
Walter Willinger  AT&T Labs - Research
Shmuel Winograd  IBM Corporation
Margaret H. Wright  Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University

 

Prizes to be awarded in 2010

Denes Konig Prize* will be awarded at the SIAM Conference on Discrete Mathematics.

The following prizes will be awarded at the 2010 SIAM Annual Meeting:

I. E. Block Community Lecture
Julian Cole Lectureship*
AWM-SIAM Sonia Kovalevsky Lecture
Richard C. DiPrima Prize*
George Polya Prize*
W. T. and Idalia Reid Prize*
SIAM Award in the Mathematical Contest in Modeling (MCM)
SIAM Outstanding Paper Prizes
SIAM Prize for Distinguished Service to the Profession

The John von Neumann Lecture

*  Calls for Nominations for these prizes will be posted at the SIAM website and published in electronic newsletters as they become available.

Donate · Contact Us · Site Map · Join SIAM · My Account
Facebook Twitter Youtube linkedin google+