Kiran Kedlaya | |
---|---|
Born | July 1974 (age 37) Silver Spring, Maryland |
Nationality | American |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | MIT |
Alma mater | MIT (Ph.D. 2000) Princeton (M.A. 1997) Harvard (B.A. 1996) |
Doctoral advisor | Aise Johan de Jong |
Kiran Sridhara Kedlaya (English: /ˈkɪrən ˈʃriːdər kɛdˈlɑːjə/;[1] born July 1974) is an Indian American mathematician. He currently is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
At age 16, Kedlaya won a gold medal at the International Mathematics Olympiad,[2] and would later win a silver and another gold medal. While an undergraduate student at Harvard, he was a three-time Putnam Fellow. A 1996 article by The Harvard Crimson described him as "the best college-age student in math in the United States".[3]
Kedlaya was runner-up for the 1996 Morgan Prize, for a paper[4] in which he substantially improved on results of Babai and Sós (1985)[5] on the size of the largest product-free subset of a finite group of order n.