Oswald Veblen Prize
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Oswald Veblen Prize
__NOTOC__ The Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry is an award granted by the American Mathematical Society for notable research in geometry or topology. It was founded in 1961 in memory of Oswald Veblen. The Veblen Prize is now worth US$5000, and is awarded every three years. The first seven prize winners were awarded for works in topology. James Harris Simons and William Thurston were the first ones to receive it for works in geometry (for some distinctions, see geometry and topology). As of 2020, there have been thirty-four prize recipients. List of recipients * 1964 Christos Papakyriakopoulos * 1964 Raoul Bott * 1966 Stephen Smale * 1966 Morton Brown and Barry Mazur * 1971 Robion Kirby * 1971 Dennis Sullivan * 1976 William Thurston * 1976 James Harris Simons * 1981 Mikhail Gromov (mathematician), Mikhail Gromov for: ::''Manifolds of negative curvature.'' Journal of Differential Geometry 13 (1978), no. 2, 223–230. ::''Almost flat manifolds.'' Journal of Differential Geometry 13 ...
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Geometry
Geometry (; ) is, with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. It is concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. A mathematician who works in the field of geometry is called a ''geometer''. Until the 19th century, geometry was almost exclusively devoted to Euclidean geometry, which includes the notions of point, line, plane, distance, angle, surface, and curve, as fundamental concepts. During the 19th century several discoveries enlarged dramatically the scope of geometry. One of the oldest such discoveries is Carl Friedrich Gauss' ("remarkable theorem") that asserts roughly that the Gaussian curvature of a surface is independent from any specific embedding in a Euclidean space. This implies that surfaces can be studied ''intrinsically'', that is, as stand-alone spaces, and has been expanded into the theory of manifolds and Riemannian geometry. Later in the 19th century, it appeared that geometries ...
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