Israeli professional mathematician association
The Israel Mathematical Union (IMU) (Hebrew: הַאִיגּוּד הַיִשְׂרְאֵלִי לְמָתֶמָטִיקָה) is an association of professional mathematicians in Israel. It is a member of the European Mathematical Society and the International Council for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, and has reciprocity membership agreements with the American Mathematical Society and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.[1]
The Union was founded on 2 March 1953 and held its first meeting with eleven short lectures on 28 September of that year.[2] Early members included Binyamin Amirà, Michael Fekete, and Abraham Fraenkel, who represented the Union at the 1954 International Congress of Mathematicians in Amsterdam, as well as Shmuel Agmon, Jacob Levitzki, and Dov Jarden.[2]
Prizes
The Israel Mathematical Union awards four major prizes:
- The Anna and Lajos Erdős Prize in Mathematics, awarded to an Israeli mathematician under the age of 41.[3]
- The Levitzki Prize in Algebra, awarded biennially to a young Israeli mathematician for research in Algebra or related areas.[4]
- The Haim Nessyahu Prize in Mathematics, awarded for outstanding achievements in a mathematical Ph.D. dissertation.[5]
- The Abarbanel Prize in Applied Mathematics, awarded to an Israeli applied mathematician under the age of 48.[6]
Presidents
See also
References