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Masaki Kashiwara, a Japanese mathematician, received this year’s Abel Prize, which aspires to be the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in math. Dr. Kashiwara’s highly abstract work combined ...
Masaki Kashiwara, this year’s Abel Prize winner, co-founded a new field of mathematics called algebraic analysis. Skip to main content. Scientific American. March 26, 2025. 7 min read.
Masaki Kashiwara has won the 2025 Abel prize, sometimes called the Nobel prize of mathematics, for his work on algebraic analysis.. Kashiwara, a professor at Kyoto University, Japan, received the ...
Masaki Kashiwara has won the 2025 Abel prize, seen by some as the Nobel of mathematics, for his contributions to algebraic analysis and representation theory. advertisement. New Scientist.
Masaki Kashiwara, project professor at Kyoto University’s Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, has been awarded the prestigious Abel Prize for 2025. The Norwegian Academy of Science and ...
Mathematician Masaki Kashiwara has won the 2025 Abel Prize, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced today. Kashiwara is known for building bridges across seemingly distant branches ...
Masaki Kashiwara, a Japanese mathematician, received this year’s Abel Prize, which aspires to be the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in maths. Kashiwara’s highly abstract work combined algebra, geometry ...
Japan's Masaki Kashiwara Wins Prestigious Abel Prize For Mathematics The 78-year-old mathematician was honoured for "his fundamental contributions to algebraic analysis and representation theory.
Masaki Kashiwara, project professor at Kyoto University's Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, speaks in an interview on May 19, 2025, in Oslo. (Kyodo) OSLO (Kyodo) -- Japanese ...
Two other RIMS mathematicians, Masaki Kashiwara and Akio Tamagawa, speaking in Japanese, announced the publication at a press conference in Kyoto on 3 April. The paper “will have a big impact ...
Two other RIMS mathematicians, Masaki Kashiwara and Akio Tamagawa, announced in Japanese the publication at a 3 April press conference in Kyoto. The paper “will have a big impact”, said Kashiwara.
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