What does this year's Abel Prize mean for mathematics?
2021-03-24
This year's Abel Prize has gone to László Lovász and Avi Wigderson for their basic contributions to discrete mathematics and theoretical computer science. Stephan Wagner and Svante Janson, who both conduct research in discrete mathematics, tell about what the prize means for their field.

“Discrete mathematics as an independent field is a relatively young branch of mathematics and has largely grown due to its applications in computer science. This year's Abel Prize recognizes Lovász's and Wigderson's role in shaping discrete mathematics and theoretical computer science into central mathematical areas,” says Stephan Wagner, senior lecturer in mathematics at Uppsala University.
Svante Janson, professor of mathematics at Uppsala University, also emphasizes the importance of computer science for the development of modern mathematics.
“Computer science is an important source of interesting and difficult mathematical problems today, of a different kind than traditional applied mathematics which has mainly interacted with physics,” says Svante Janson.
Both Lovász and Wigderson have contributed to many research topics in discrete mathematics and theoretical computer science, but it is mainly Lovász's work in combinatorics that has been pertinent to Stephan Wagner's and Svante Janson's research. Stephan Wagner has worked on extremal graph theory, where Lovász is considered one of the foremost specialists, while Svante Janson has written several articles on graph limits, a concept developed by Lovász and collaborators about fifteen years ago.

What do you think the connection between mathematics and computer science will look like in the future?
“I know too little about where computer science is heading, so I do not dare to predict the future. But I would think that computer science will continue to generate problems that are of great theoretical interest to mathematicians,” says Svante Janson.
Stephan Wagner believes that the connection between the disciplines will be even stronger in the future.
“Computers give us new opportunities but also new challenges and interesting new research topics. For example, interest in graph theory has increased as a result of questions about large networks.”
Alma Kirlic
News from the Department of Mathematics
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Appreciated alumni event to be repeated next year
2023-11-15
On Wednesday, 25 October, an event for the department's alumni was organised for the first time. About fifty people came to see fellow students and teachers, to network with other mathematicians and, not least, to take part in the programme items with the theme AI. Several of the department's teachers/researchers and students also participated.
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22 million in VR grants
2023-11-07
The Swedish Research Council (VR) has awarded five project grants and one starting grant totaling just over 22 million SEK to researchers at the Department of Mathematics at Uppsala University during 2023-2027. VR rewards research of the highest scientific quality in national competition. In the same call, VR distributed a total of approximately SEK 82 million for research in mathematics.
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Game Changer Talk about AI
2023-10-09
Hello there Anders Karlsson, Professor of Mathematics at both Uppsala University and the University of Geneva. You have been invited to give a talk on AI at a Game Changer Talks event in connection with the BNP Paribas Nordic Open* tennis tournament in Stockholm on 19 October. That sounds interesting!
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Arne Beurling's bust moved and re-inaugurated
2023-10-03
On Friday 29 September there was a re-inauguration of Arne Beurling's bust, which has now been relocated to the green area outside Café Ångström. It was a small, very pleasant event where about 40 people had gathered to maintain and honour his memory.
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Geometric puzzles attracted at SciFest
2023-10-03
The Department of Mathematics organised a geometric puzzle activity during the Friday programme of the SciFest science festival on 22 September. More than 1200 school students visited the festival that day, many of whom came out to try to solve the puzzles. The festival took place at Fyrishov in Uppsala.
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Beurling visit and G printer opening
2023-09-14
This week we had the pleasure of receiving Arne Beurling's grandchildren and great-grandchildren visiting from the USA. In connection with the visit, FRA opened the hood of the German encryption machine der Geheimschreiber (the G-writer), which has been deposited by FRA at the department and is displayed in the Explanatorium exhibition at the Ångström Laboratory.
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Two laureates of the Frontiers of Science Awards
2023-08-14
On the International Congress of Basic Science in Beijing this summer, newly established prizes in mathematics were awarded. In the category Frontiers of Science Awards the Department of Mathematics at Uppsala University has two laureates, motivated by two different articles. They get the prize for research that is of highest scientific value and originality and that have made an important impact on its area.
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Almedalen seminar: Nobody understands AI - what´s the problem?
2023-08-09
On 29 June, the department together with the Swedish National Committee for Mathematics arranged a seminar during the Almedal Week on Gotland entitled "Nobody understands AI - what's the problem?". The seminar included a product designer, two maths researchers and a member of parliament, all of whom gave their views on where we are in AI development and then formed a panel for questions from the audience.
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Support from KAW's mathematics programme to prominent mathematics researchers
2023-03-23
In order for Sweden to regain an international leading position in the field of mathematics, the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, together with the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, is providing support by giving the best young researchers international experience and recruiting both young and more experienced mathematicians to Sweden. The 2023 award includes four researchers at Uppsala University.
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We take part in the Nordic Congress of Mathematicians
2023-02-17
On July 3-7, the 29th Nordic Congress of Mathematicians will take place in Aalborg, Denmark. The congress is usually held every four years. Researchers from the Department of Mathematics at Uppsala University are involved in arranging two of the congress's special sessions.
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UTN's pedagogical award to Anna Sakovich
2023-02-01
UTN's pedagogical award for 2022 was awarded to Anna Sakovich for her pedagogical efforts in the Single Variable Calculus course! Thanks to Anna's drive, dedication and interest in the students' learning, she makes the students enjoy the studies.
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Starting grant enables research on random graphs
2023-01-02
When 2022’s grants decision came from the Swedish Research Council, mathematician Annika Heckel was on the recipient list. The four-year starting grant means more time for research on random graphs. “My research is in theoretical mathematics. But random graph theory is never too far away from possible applications to large and disordered networks in our daily lives, from the internet to social networks and models for the spread of disease.”
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Over 20 million in VR grants
2022-11-07
The Swedish Research Council (VR) has awarded five project grants and one starting grant totaling almost 22 million SEK to researchers at the Department of Mathematics at Uppsala University. VR rewards research of the highest scientific quality in national competition. In the same call, VR distributed a total of approximately SEK 94 million for research in mathematics.
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Entertaining mathematician gets prize
2022-09-13
David Sumpter, professor of applied mathematics, receives this year's Disapris for his popular science books on mathematics. David Sumpter has been a professor in the Department of Mathematics but is now active in the Department of Information Technology.”
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International collaboration between mathematics and physics
2021-09-03
Michele Del Zotto at Uppsala University has been appointed a principal investigator within the Simons Collaboration on Global Categorical Symmetries. This collaboration brings together world leading theoretical physicists and mathematicians from several different universities and gives Uppsala University a financial support of around 500,000 USD during four years.
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Seidon Alsaody receives the University's pedagogical award
2021-05-26
Seidon Alsaody is the 2021 pedagogical laureate at Uppsala University in the field of mathematics, science and technology. He was notified at the mathematics department's staff meeting by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor Coco Norén, who made an unexpected visit.
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Johan Asplund is looking forward to mathematical conversations
2021-03-26
Johan Asplund, who will soon defend his doctoral thesis in symplectic geometry, has received a postdoctoral position at Columbia University in New York, funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. He is looking forward to exciting mathematical conversations and to finding himself as a mathematician.
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What does this year's Abel Prize mean for mathematics?
2021-03-24
This year's Abel Prize has gone to László Lovász and Avi Wigderson for their basic contributions to discrete mathematics and theoretical computer science. Stephan Wagner and Svante Janson, who both conduct research in discrete mathematics, tell about what the prize means for their field.
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Why is pi special?
2021-03-12
On 14 March every year, the world celebrates the peculiar number pi. Meet the mathematics lecturer Jordi-Lluís Figueras in a conversation about pi and mathematics.
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Seidon Alsaody receives pedagogical award from student union
2021-02-26
Last year's pedagogical award from the Uppsala Union of Technology and Science Students (UTN) goes to the mathematics lecturer Seidon Alsaody, because he has "through his teaching method succeeded to inspire, support and motivate his students in a way that few teachers have managed to do".
"I was really happy and surprised when UTN told me about it", says Seidon Alsaody.
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Wallenberg prize 2020 goes to Thomas Kragh
2020-04-15
Thomas Kragh receives the 2020 year's Wallenberg Prize "for his work in sympathetic geometry and topology, especially for his important contribution to Floers homotope theory and Lagrange topology."
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Will AI take over the world?
2018-10-10
Fake news don't affect people's worldview as much as we might think, said David Sumpter in a lecture he held as part of a symposium organised by Uppsala University in collaboration with Tokyo Tech.
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Summer math camp – success continues
2018-10-10
In August, the department organized the fifth round of the Summer Math Camp. The camp is aimed at students who want to try mathematical research. In this year's edition, under the theme finite fields and their applications, four students participated: Mikolaj Cuszynski-Kruk, Sara Freyland, Johannes Granér and Einar Waara. We've asked the students about their thoughts on the camp.
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Julian Külshammer receives algebra prize
2018-08-20
The new Uppsala mathematician Julian Külshammer has received the algebra prize ICRA 2018
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Uppsala mathematician awarded The Moore Prize for Applications of Interval Analysis
2018-07-12
Uppsala mathematicians Jordi-Lluís Figueras and Alejandro Luque are awarded The Moore Prize for Applications of Interval Analysis for the article "Rigorous Computer Assisted Application of KAM Theory: A Modern Approach", which they written with Alex Haro. Thus, Uppsala University is the only one that has recieved the Moore Prize twice. The first time the award went to a matemathematician from Uppsala was in 2002, when the prize went to Warwick Tucker.
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Hania Uscka-Wehlou receives two teaching awards
2018-06-21
The students have rewarded Hania Uscka-Wehlou with no less than two awards, the Electrotechnical Educational Prize 2018 and the F-Teacher Award 2018.
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Student from Uppsala participates in a project about the number Pi at Sorbonne
2018-06-21
Uppsala student Nima Akbarian knows 3141 decimals of pi. He has demonstrated this skill at an event that took place in early June at the Sorbonne Université in Paris.
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Research grant to Samuel Edwards from Uppsala
2018-04-04
Knut och Alice Wallenberg foundation continues to invest in mathematics. According to the chair Peter Wallenberg jr, mathematics is important for handling the huge amounts of data that we are exposed to today. Therefore, the foundation is investing in development of basic research in mathematics and awarding grants to fourteen mathematicians. One of the researchers to receive a grant is Samuel Edwards, who will defend his doctoral thesis at the department of mathematics in Uppsala on June 8.
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Math for social activism
2018-03-07
From Facebook to job evaluations, mathematics now plays an important part in every aspect of our social lives. And, increasingly, mathematicians are actively using their skills to improve society. The Centre for Interdisciplinary Mathematics will thus run a theme around "Maths for social activism" culminating in a workshop on June 4th and 5th.