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  1. On 13 August 2014 came the highlight of Maryam Mirzakhani’s career: she was awarded the Fields Medal. In his laudation, the American mathe-matician Jordan Ellenberg explained Mirzakhani’s research results as follows: [Her] work expertly blends dynamics with geometry. Among other things, she studies billiards.

  2. d her a Fields Medal in 2014.Mirzakhani was born on May 12, 1977, in Tehran and grew up in postrevolutionary Ir. n during the Iran–Iraq War. One of four children, her father was an eng. neer, her mother a homemaker. All three of. er siblings became engineers. It was in middle school that she discovered her passi.

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    As a child growing up in Tehran, Mirzakhani had no intention of becoming a mathematician. Her chief goal was simply to read every book she could find. She also watched television biographies of famous women such as Marie Curie and Helen Keller, and later read “Lust for Life,” a novel about Vincent van Gogh. These stories instilled in her an undefin...

    Gold medals at the mathematical Olympiad don’t always translate into success in mathematics research, McMullen observed. “In these contests, someone has carefully crafted a problem with a clever solution, but in research, maybe the problem doesn’t have a solution at all.” Unlike many Olympiad high-scorers, he said, Mirzakhani “has the ability to ge...

    Mirzakhani likes to describe herself as slow. Unlike some mathematicians who solve problems with quicksilver brilliance, she gravitates toward deep problems that she can chew on for years. “Months or years later, you see very different aspects” of a problem, she said. There are problems she has been thinking about for more than a decade. “And still...

    Mirzakhani is the first woman to win a Fields Medal. The gender imbalance in mathematics is long-standing and pervasive, and the Fields Medal, in particular, is ill-suited to the career arcs of many female mathematicians. It is restricted to mathematicians younger than 40, focusing on the very years during which many women dial back their careers t...

  3. In 1995 Mirzakhani began her study of mathematics at Sharif University of Technology funded with an IPM fellowship. This university in Tehran, established in 1966, is the leading university in Iran for physical science. She said (see [6] or [7]):-. I met many inspiring mathematicians and friends at Sharif University.

  4. can do it, even though you’ll be the first one,” Mirzakhani said. “I think that has influenced my life quite a lot. (Klarreich 2014).” Mirzakhani first appeared on the international math scene when she was seventeen years old, winning a gold medal at the 1994 International Math Olympiads, and finishing with a

  5. Sep 7, 2017 · Maryam Mirzakhani was one of the greatest mathematicians of her generation. She made monumental contributions to the study of the dynamics and geometry of mathematical objects called Riemann surfaces.

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  7. MARYAM MIRZAKHANI (1977 − 2017) 545 On 101.07: Graham Jameson writes: The author establishes that A1/3G2/3 ≤ L(a, b)≤1 3 A + 2 3 G,(1) where and . It is a rather neat fact that this pair of inequalities contains, almost for free, the further information that the number is optimal on both sides. In other words, for any , one can

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