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Julianna Tymoczko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julianna Sophia Tymoczko (born 1975)[1] is an American mathematician whose research connects algebraic geometry and algebraic combinatorics, including representation theory, Schubert calculus, equivariant cohomology, and Hessenberg varieties. She is a professor of mathematics at Smith College.[2]

Education and career

Tymoczko grew up in Western Massachusetts, and studied discrete mathematics at Smith College as a high school student.[3] She was an undergraduate at Harvard University, and wrote a senior thesis on the homotopy groups of spheres, The p-components of the stable homotopy groups of spheres, with Joe Harris and Michael J. Hopkins as faculty mentors.[3][4] After graduating in 1998,[4] she moved to Princeton University for graduate study, and completed her Ph.D. there in 2003. Her dissertation, Decomposing Hessenberg Varieties over Classical Groups, was supervised by Robert MacPherson.[3][5]

After being a Clay Liftoff Fellow, NSF Postdoctoral Fellow, and Hildebrandt Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan, she took a tenure-track position at the University of Iowa in 2007. In 2011 she returned to Smith College as a faculty member. She was promoted to full professor in 2019.[6]

Recognition

Tymoczko was elected as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in the 2020 class, for "contributions to algebraic geometry and combinatorics, and for outreach and mentorship".[7]

Personal life

Tymoczko is one of three children of Thomas Tymoczko, a logician and philosopher of mathematics at Smith College, and comparative literature scholar Maria Tymoczko of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Her brother, Dmitri Tymoczko, is a music composer and music theorist.[8] She is married to Marshall Poe, a historian at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.[9]

References

  1. ^ Middle name and birth year from Library of Congress catalog, retrieved 2019-11-04.
  2. ^ "Julianna Tymoczko", Faculty directory, Smith College, retrieved 2019-11-03
  3. ^ a b c Tymoczko, Julianna, About me, Smith College, retrieved 2019-11-03
  4. ^ a b "Thesis 1998", Harvard Mathematics Department Senior Thesis and PhD Thesis, Harvard Mathematics, retrieved 2019-11-03
  5. ^ Julianna Tymoczko at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ "Faculty members approved for tenure and promotion", Grécourt Gate: News & Events for the Smith College Community, Smith College, February 28, 2019, retrieved November 5, 2019
  7. ^ 2020 Class of the Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2019-11-03
  8. ^ For the connection to her mother and brothers, see Tymoczko, Maria (1997), The Irish Ulysses, University of California Press, p. xi, ISBN 9780520209060 For the connection to her father see Tymoczko, Maria (2014), Enlarging Translation, Empowering Translators, Routledge, p. 11, ISBN 9781317639336
  9. ^ Poe, Marshall T. (2010), "Acknowledgements", A History of Communications: Media and Society from the Evolution of Speech to the Internet, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781139495578
This page was last edited on 22 November 2021, at 00:53
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