Manjul Bhargava

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Manjul Bhargava (मञ्जुल भार्गव) (born 1974) is a professor of mathematics at Princeton University. His research interests span algebraic number theory, combinatorics, and representation theory. He graduated from Harvard University in 1996 and received his doctorate from Princeton in 2001, working under Andrew Wiles. His breakthrough Ph.D. thesis surprised the mathematical community by generalizing the classical Gauss composition law for quadratic forms to many other situations. He has expanded and rewritten his results in a series of papers published in the prestigious journal Annals of Mathematics. One major use of his results is the parametrization of quartic and quintic orders in number fields, thus allowing the study of asymptotic behaviour of arithmetic properties of these rings. Princeton hired him at the rank of full professor with tenure just two years after he finished graduate school.

Bhargava has won several awards for his research, including the AMS–MAA–SIAM Frank and Brennie Morgan Prize, a Clay Research Fellowship, the Clay Research Award in 2005, and the Leonard M. and Eleanor B. Blumenthal Award for the Advancement of Research in Pure Mathematics. He was named one of Popular Science Magazine’s “Brilliant 10” in November 2002. He recently won the American Mathematical Society's Cole Prize in number theory and the $10,000 SASTRA Ramanujan Prize, shared with Kannan Soundararajan, awarded by SASTRA in Tanjavur, India, for his outstanding contributions to number theory.

His contributions include:

Manjul is also a very good tabla player, having studied under Zakir Hussain. He is also interested in Sanskrit.

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