Hausdorff Medal

The Hausdorff medal is a mathematical prize awarded every two years by the European Set Theory Society. The award recognises the work considered to have had the most impact within set theory among all articles published in the previous five years. The award is named after the German mathematician Felix Hausdorff (1868–1942).

Winners

  • 2013: Hugh Woodin for his articles "Suitable extender models I" (J. Math. Log. 10 (2010), no. 1-2, pp.101–339) and "Suitable extender models II: beyond ω-huge" (J. Math. Log. 11 (2011), no. 2, pp.115–436).
  • 2015: Ronald Jensen and John R. Steel for their article "K without the measurable" (The Journal of Symbolic Logic, Volume 78, Issue 3 (2013), pp.708-734).[1]
  • 2017: Maryanthe Malliaris and Saharon Shelah for their article "General topology meets model theory, on 𝔭 and 𝔱" (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 110 (2013), no. 33, 13300-13305).[2]
  • 2019: Itay Neeman for his work on "the new method of iterating forcing using side conditions and the tree property".[3]

See also

References

  1. Award page at the website of the European Set Theory Society
  2. "Third Hausdorff Medal 2017". European Set Theory Society. July 5, 2017. Retrieved 2017-08-01.
  3. "The Hausdorff Lecture 2019: Itay Neeman - The tree property forcing axioms everywhere". YouTube. Kurt Gödel Research Center. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
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