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Mayuko Yamashita

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mayuko Yamashita (Japanese: 山下 真由子, born 1995[1]) is a Japanese mathematician and mathematical physicist whose research combines the areas of algebraic topology, differential cohomology, and quantum field theory. She is an associate professor at Kyoto University.

Education and career

Yamashita represented Japan in the 2013 International Mathematical Olympiad, earning a silver medal.[2] She studied engineering at the University of Tokyo, earning a bachelor's degree in 2017. She earned a master's degree in mathematical sciences at the University of Tokyo in March 2019,[3] and completed a Ph.D. there in 2022. Her dissertation, Differential models for the Anderson dual to bordism theories and invertible QFT's, was supervised by Yasuyuki Kawahigashi.[4]

Meanwhile, in 2019, she became an assistant professor in the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences of Kyoto University,[3] while only 23 years old.[5] She was promoted to associate professor in 2023.[3]

Recognition

Yamashita was one of the recipients of the 2021 Takebe Katahiro Prize for Encouragement of Young Researchers of the Mathematical Society of Japan.[3][6] She received the 2022 Grand Prize in the Marie Sklodowska Curie Awards of the Japan Science and Technology Agency "for her work on mathematical applications to particle physics".[5] She was named in the Asian Scientist 100 list (2023).[7] She was a 2024 recipient of the Maryam Mirzakhani New Frontiers Prize, associated with the Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics, "for contributions to mathematical physics and index theory".[8]

References

  1. ^ "新鋭の数学者は迷いながら突き進む 深甚なる数学の世界", 紅萠 (Kurenaimoyuru, in Japanese), Kyoto University, March 2023, retrieved 2023-09-15
  2. ^ "Mayuko Yamashita", Participants, International Mathematical Olympiad, retrieved 2023-09-14
  3. ^ a b c d Curriculum vitae, retrieved 2023-09-14
  4. ^ Mayuko Yamashita at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ a b Osumi, Magdalena (19 May 2022), "Mayuko Yamashita, 26, wins new award for young female researchers", Japan Times, retrieved 2023-09-14
  6. ^ The MSJ Takebe Katahiro Prizes, Mathematical Society of Japan, retrieved 2023-09-14
  7. ^ THE ASIAN SCIENTIST 100_Mayuko Yamashita, Asian Scientist Magazine, 10 July 2023, retrieved 2023-09-15
  8. ^ "Breakthrough Prize Announces 2024 Laureates In Life Sciences, Fundamental Physics, And Mathematics", Breakthrough Prizes, retrieved 2023-09-14

External links

This page was last edited on 15 September 2023, at 19:13
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