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Andrew J. Wiles


Andrew J. Wiles Awarded the "IMU Silver Plaque"
 
 

 


 

 

The British mathematician Andrew J. Wiles was honored with the "IMU silver plaque" of the International Mathematical Union. The chairman of the Fields Medals Committee, Yuri Manin, presented him with this award during the opening ceremony of the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berlin.

 

During the Congress, which is held every four years, four Fields Medals are awarded to outstanding mathematicians under the age of forty. In view of their significance the Fields medals are often dubbed the "Nobel Prize of Mathematics." Four years ago, Andrew J. Wiles was a hot favorite for an award, since in 1993 he had presented a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem -- one of the most famous mathematical puzzles, which had remained unsolved for more than 350 years. Shortly afterwards, however, colleagues found a gap in the proof, which Wiles was only able to close up a year later. But this was too late for the Fields Medal, because Wiles was then over the age limit of forty. With its special tribute, the International Mathematical Union acknowledged Andrew J. Wiles's outstanding achievement.

Andrew J. Wiles(born 11 April 1953) is Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University. Since 1995 he has also been a member of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS). Wiles studied in England at Cambridge University before going to America as assistant professor at Harvard in 1974. In 1982, he became professor in Princeton. His fields of research are number theory and arithmetic geometry.