Salem Prize
The Salem Prize, founded by the widow of Raphael Salem, is awarded every year to a young mathematician judged to have done outstanding work in Salem's field of interest, primarily the theory of Fourier series. The prize is considered highly prestigious and many of the recipients of Salem prize have also been awarded the Fields Medal later in their career. The prize was 5000 French Francs in 1990.[1]
Past winners
(Note: a F symbol denotes mathematicians who later earned a Fields Medal).
- 1968 Nicholas Varopoulos[1]
- 1969 Richard Hunt[1]
- 1970 Yves Meyer[1]
- 1971 Charles FeffermanF[1]
- 1972 Thomas Körner[1]
- 1973 Evgenii Mikhailovich Nikishin[1]
- 1974 Hugh Montgomery[1]
- 1975 William Beckner[1]
- 1976 Michael R. Herman[1]
- 1977 S. V. Bockarev[1]
- 1978 Björn E. Dahlberg[1]
- 1979 Gilles Pisier[1]
- 1980 Stylianos Pichorides[1]
- 1981 Peter Jones[1]
- 1982 Alexei B. Aleksandrov[1]
- 1983 Jean BourgainF[1]
- 1984 Carlos Kenig[1]
- 1985 Thomas Wolff[1]
- 1986 Nikolai Makarov[1]
- 1987 Guy David and Jean Lin Journe[1]
- 1988 Alexander Volberg and Jean-Christophe YoccozF[1]
- 1989 no prize
- 1990 Sergei Konyagin[1]
- 1991 Curtis T. McMullenF
- 1992 Mitsuhiro Shishikura
- 1993 Sergei Treil
- 1994 Kari Astala
- 1995 Håkan Eliasson
- 1996 Michael Lacey and Christoph Thiele
- 1997 no prize
- 1998 Trevor Wooley
- 1999 Fedor Nazarov
- 2000 Terence TaoF
- 2001 Oded Schramm and Stanislav SmirnovF
- 2002 Xavier Tolsa
- 2003 Elon LindenstraussF and Kannan Soundararajan
- 2004 no prize
- 2005 Ben J. Green
- 2006 Stefanie Petermichl and Artur AvilaF
- 2007 Akshay Venkatesh
- 2008 Bo'az Klartag and Assaf Naor
- 2009 no prize
- 2010 Nalini Anantharaman
- 2011 Zhan Dapeng and Julien Dubedat [2]
- 2012 no prize
- 2013 Larry Guth [3]
- 2014 Dmitry Chelkak [4]
References
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