Swedish Mathematical Society

Mathematical society in Sweden
  • Sweden
President
Volodymyr MazorchukAward(s)Wallenberg PrizeWebsitewww.swe-math-soc.se

The Swedish Mathematical Society (Swedish: Svenska Matematikersamfundet, SMS) is a mathematical society founded in Sweden in 1950. It is a member of the European Mathematical Society and is recognised by the International Mathematics Union.[1][2]

The Swedish Mathematical Society organises two member meetings per year, awards the Wallenberg Prize annually, and organises conferences and scientific meetings with other mathematical societies.[3] It publishes a bulletin three times a year.[3] The logo of the SMS contains the third iteration of the Koch snowflake,[4] which was first described by Swedish mathematician Helge von Koch in 1904.[5]

Presidents

The first president of the Swedish Mathematical Society was Arne Beurling, and the second president was Åke Pleijel.[6] The Swedish Mathematical Society elects a new president every two years, and traditionally each president works at a different mathematics department from their predecessor.[3] The current president of the SMS is Volodymyr Mazorchuk.[2]

Wallenberg Prize

Since 1983 the Swedish Mathematical Society has awarded its Wallenberg Prize to Swedish mathematicians that have a Ph.D. but no permanent research position.[6] The winner is the main speaker at the autumn meeting of the society.[3]

Past winners of the prize are:[7]

  • 1983 – Torsten Ekedahl [sv]
  • 1984 – Svante Janson and Anders Melin [sv]
  • 1987 – Johan Håstad
  • 1988 – Mikael Passare [sv] and Ulf Persson
  • 1989 – Arne Meurman
  • 1990 – Håkan Eliasson
  • 1991 – Per Salberger
  • 1992 – Håkan Hedenmalm
  • 1993 – Johan Råde
  • 1994 – Mats Andersson
  • 1995 – Kurt Johansson and Anders Szepessy
  • 1996 – Peter Ebenfelt [de]
  • 1997 – Erik Andersén and Bernt Wennberg
  • 1998 – Lars Ernström and Timo Weidl
  • 1999 – Olle Häggström
  • 2000 – Tobias Ekholm and Erik Palmgren
  • 2001 – Warwick Tucker
  • 2002 – Pär Kurlberg [sv] and Genkai Zhang
  • 2003 – Dmitrij Kozlov and Oleg Safronov
  • 2004 – Julius Borcea and Serguei Shimorin
  • 2005 – Hans Rullgård and Andreas Strömbergsson
  • 2006 – Mattias Jonsson
  • 2007 – Hans Ringström [sv]
  • 2008 – Petter Brändén and Anders Karlsson
  • 2009 – Mats Boij and Kaj Nyström
  • 2010 – Robert Berman
  • 2011 – Johan Wästlund
  • 2012 – Kristian Bjerklöv and Andreas Rosén
  • 2013 – Håkan Samuelsson Kalm and Elizabeth Wulcan
  • 2014 – Fredrik Wiklund
  • 2015 – Jonatan Lenells and David Rydh
  • 2016 – John Andersson and Erik Wahlén
  • 2017 – Maurice Duits
  • 2018 – Dan Petersen and David Witt Nyström
  • 2019 – Mikael Björklund and Erik Lindgren
  • 2020 – Thomas Kragh
  • 2021 – Magnus Goffeng [sv]
  • 2022 – Wushi Goldring and Martin Raum
  • 2023 – Lilian Matthiesen and Olof Sisask

See also

References

  1. ^ "Full members of the EMS", European Mathematical Society, retrieved 2024-08-12
  2. ^ a b "Members: Sweden", International Mathematics Union, retrieved 2024-08-12
  3. ^ a b c d Klas Markström (January 2018), "Reciprocal Societies: The Swedish Mathematical Society" (PDF), Newsletter of the London Mathematical Society (474): 41, retrieved 2024-08-13
  4. ^ "Om Oss" [About Us], Swedish Mathematical Society (in Swedish), retrieved 2024-08-13
  5. ^ Helge von Koch (1904), "Sur une courbe continue sans tangente, obtenue par une construction géométrique élémentaire", Arkiv för Matematik (in French), 1: 681–704, JFM 35.0387.02
  6. ^ a b "MacTutor: The Swedish Mathematical Society", MacTutor, retrieved 2024-08-12
  7. ^ "Wallenbergpriset" [Wallenberg Prize], Swedish Mathematical Society (in Swedish), retrieved 2024-08-13
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