Booker graduated from the University of Virginia in 1998, earning the E.J. McShane Prize as the top undergraduate in mathematics.[6] He completed his doctoral degree at Princeton University in 2003, under the supervision of Peter Sarnak.[7]
Contributions
In the spring of 2019 Booker gained international attention by showing that 33 can be expressed as the sum of three cubes.[4][8][9][10] At that time 33 and 42 were the only numbers less than 100 for which this problem was open. Later that year, in joint work with Andrew Sutherland of MIT, he settled the case of 42,[11][12] as well as answering a 65-year-old question of Mordell by finding a third representation for 3 as the sum of three cubes.[13]Popular Mechanics cited the result for 42 as one of the top two mathematical breakthroughs of 2019.[5][14]
Video appearances
Numberphile has produced three YouTube videos related to sums of three cubes in which Andrew Booker is the featured guest: