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Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» basdini replied on Tue Aug 22, 2006 @ 1:46pm
basdini
Coolness: 145200
MADRID, Spain (AP) -- A reclusive Russian won an academic prize Tuesday for work toward solving one of history's toughest math problems, but he refused to accept the award -- a stunning renunciation of accolades from his field's top minds.

Grigory Perelman, a 40-year-old native of St. Petersburg, was praised for work in the field known as topology, which studies shapes, and for a breakthrough that might help scientists figure out nothing less than the shape of the universe.

But besides shunning the medal, academic colleagues say he also seems uninterested in a separate, $1 million prize he might be awarded for his feat. It had proved a theorem about the nature of multidimensional space that has stumped people for 100 years.

The Fields Medal was announced at the International Congress of Mathematicians, an event held every four years, this time in Madrid.

Three other mathematicians -- another Russian, a Frenchman and an Australian -- also won Fields honors this year. They received their awards from King Juan Carlos to loud applause from delegates to the conference. But Perelman was not present.

"I regret that Dr. Perelman has declined to accept the medal," said John Ball, president of the International Mathematical Union, which is holding the convention.

Perelman's work is still under review, but no one has found any serious flaw in it, the union said in a statement.

Ball later told The Associated Press he did not interpret Perelman's decision to shun the medal as an insult to the world's top math brains. "I am sure he did not mean it that way," he said.

"He has his reasons," Ball added, without saying what they might be.

The riddle Perelman tackled is called the Poincare conjecture, which essentially says that in three dimensions, a doughnut shape cannot be transformed into a sphere without ripping it, although any shape without a hole can be stretched or shrunk into a sphere.

The prize money is separate and will be decided in about two years by a private foundation, the Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, after other academics have analyzed Perelman's work.

If his proof stands the test of time, Perelman will win all or part of the $1 million prize money. In 2000, the institute announced bounties for seven unresolved, historic math problems, including the one Perelman tackled.

Two weeks ago, academics began analyzing Perelman's work, which draws heavily from a technique developed by another mathematician, Richard Hamilton of Columbia University. The institute says it could conceivably share the money.
I'm feeling surly right now..
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» moondancer replied on Tue Aug 22, 2006 @ 2:04pm
moondancer
Coolness: 92265
well.. I'd take it!
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» beercrack replied on Tue Aug 22, 2006 @ 6:40pm
beercrack
Coolness: 71435
indeed he shows profound intelligence
I'm feeling dumb right now..
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» neoform replied on Tue Aug 22, 2006 @ 8:12pm
neoform
Coolness: 339665
Heh, anyone that can prove the Poincare Conjecture is extremely intelligent.
I'm feeling beersexed right now..
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» beercrack replied on Tue Aug 22, 2006 @ 9:18pm
beercrack
Coolness: 71435
since most of you are used to sarcasm to note i was being serious
I'm feeling dumb right now..
Honor
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