Zhang was born and raised in the People's Republic of China. Representing China, he earned a gold medal at the 2008 International Mathematical Olympiad held in Madrid. He obtained a BS degree from Peking University in 2012 and a PhD from Princeton University in 2017. At Princeton, Zhang worked under the supervision of Peter Sarnak; his doctoral dissertation was Perturbed Brascamp-Lieb inequalities and application to Parsell-Vinogradov systems. After receiving his PhD, Zhang remained in Princeton for a post-doctoral year as a member of the Institute for Advanced Study and then spent three years as the Van Vleck Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In 2020, he returned to Princeton and spent one more year as a member of the Institute for Advanced Study. He has been a member of the Berkeley mathematics faculty since July 2021.[1]
Research
Zhang's contributions to mathematics include a generalization of an important conjecture in Vinogradov's Mean-Value Theorem, using novel techniques to solve Carleson's problem on pointwise convergence of solutions to the Schrödinger equation and solving the two-dimensional case of Sogge's conjecture for wave equations.[2][3]
Awards and recognition
Two of Zhang's research papers were selected for the Frontier Science Award in two separate categories during the International Congress for Basic Science held in Beijing in July 2023.[4] He is a recipient of the Sloan Research Fellowship and a winner of the Silver Prize for his doctoral thesis in the 5th New World Mathematics Awards.[5]
He is an Editor of Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, Journal of the London Mathematical Society[6] and Pacific Journal of Mathematics.[7]
References
^ ab"Ruixiang Zhang". math.berkeley.edu. Dept. of Mathematics, University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 30 September 2023.