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For
its Members, Alumni and Friends
Newsletter
of the School of Mathematics,
University of Minnesota,
February 2003 |
WELCOME
TO INCOMING FACULTY AND
NEW POSTDOCTORAL APPOINTEES
It is a pleasure to welcome the new
members of the School of Mathematics
— Professor Ofer Zeitouni and
Assistant Professors Tian-Jun Li and
Ezra Miller. We also welcome the new
Dunham Jackson Assistant Professor
Christof Melcher, as well as Postdoctoral
Associates Marshall Hampton, McKay
Hyde and Jeremy Martin. We are also
very pleased to welcome new staff
members Harry Singh, who replaces
Monika Stumpf as Executive Assistant
to the department head, and Rhonda
Dragan, who replaces Becky Johnston
as Administrative Aide at the MCIM.
Professor Ofer Zeitouni is a world
leader in probability theory and its
applications. He has made important
contributions to the theory of large
deviations, random walks, random matrix
theory, and filtering and statistical
detection. He received his Ph.D. in
electrical engineering from Technion
(Israel) in 1986 and rose there to
the rank of Professor of Electrical
Engineering and Mathematics. He has
held visiting appointments at a number
of leading institutions including
MIT, UC Berkeley, and ETH Zurich.
His honors include the Bergmann Memorial
Research Award (1991), as well as
an invited address at the International
Congress of Mathematicians, Beijing
2002.
Assistant Professor Tian-Jun Li earned
his Ph.D. in 1996 from Brandeis University.
He spent the following three years
as a Gibbs Instructor at Yale University
and as a Visiting Member at the Institute
for Advanced Study, Princeton. From
1999 to 2002 he was on the faculty
of Princeton University. His research
area is symplectic topology.
Assistant Professor Ezra Miller earned
his Ph.D. in 2000 from UC Berkeley
and spent the past two years at MIT
as an NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow.
His other honors include a Alfred
P. Sloan Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship,
a Julia B. Robinson Fellowship and
the Charles B. Morrey Award, all of
which he received while a graduate
student at UC Berkeley. His research
areas are algebraic geometry, combinatorics,
commutative algebra and mathematical
physics. He is spending the 2002 -
2003 academic year as a visiting researcher
at MSRI Berkeley.
Dunham Jackson Assistant Professor
Christof Melcher received his Ph.D.
in 2002 from Max-Planck-Institute,
Leipzig. His research areas are partial
differential equations and applications
to problems in continuum mechanics,
magnetism and materials science.
NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow Marshall
Hampton earned his Ph.D. in 2002 from
the University of Washington. His
research areas are dynamical systems,
celestial mechanics and image processing.
NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow McKay
Hyde earned his Ph.D. in 2002 from
Caltech. His research areas are numerical
solutions of PDE with emphasis on
high-order methods, fast algorithms,
integral formulations and spectral
methods.
NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow Jeremy
Martin earned his Ph.D. in 2002 from
the University of California at San
Diego. His research areas are combinatorics
and algebraic geometry.
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