The prestigious Abel Prize honors distinguished mathematicians for their contributions to the field. The 2019 Abel Prize is no different, except that its recipient is the first woman to be named an Abel Prize Laureate. Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck was honored for her research of minimal surfaces, gauge theories, soap bubble behavior, and more — as well as her exemplary use of nonlinear partial differential equations (PDEs).
A Game Changer in Mathematics
Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up with an interest in science, physics, and mathematics. Throughout her education, she was recognized for her natural aptitude for math, but faced ridicule and misogyny for it as well. When deciding where to pursue herpostgraduate education, Uhlenbeck wanted to avoid the competitive and unwelcoming environment she had already experienced, which she expected from prestigious universities. Instead, she earned her PhD in mathematics at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts.
A 1980-era photograph of Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck, Abel-Prize-winning mathematician. Image licensed underCC BY-SA 3.0, viaWikimedia Commons.
Uhlenbeck later taught at MIT; the University of Chicago; and other schools before becoming the chair of the mathematics department at the University of Texas at Austin, from where she eventually retired.
Uhlenbeck is recognized as a trailblazer in many areas of mathematics, as her accomplishments illustrate. In 1990, she became the second woman to give a plenary lecture at the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM), in Tokyo, Japan. (The first woman to do so wasEmmy Noether.) In 2000, Uhlenbeck won the U.S. National Medal of Science.
Uhlenbeck is also an advocate for women in STEM. She started the Women and Mathematics Program at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, a state where she spent much of her childhood. The aim of the program is to encourage and support women pursuing careers in math.
On March 19, 2019, Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck was named the2019 Abel Prize Laureatefor her groundbreaking research in mathematics.
2 of the Many Research Areas of Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck
I spoke to two of my more math-obsessed colleagues, Temesgen and Magnus, about what inspires them about Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck’s research…
Variational Calculus
“Of all the shapes a soap film could take, why does it settle on a particular one? The answer is that it wants to take a shape that minimizes its energy.Variational calculusis a branch of mathematics that studies shapes or functions that optimize some quantity. It has pervasive applications in science and engineering and can be used, for example, to determine the path an airplane should take to minimize travel (spoiler: not a straight line) or the deformation of an elastic object under load.
Mathematicians like Uhlenbeck study issues like the circumstances under which avariational problemhas solutions and whether said solutions are unique. Variational calculus is one of the bedrocks of thefinite element method, which can be used to simulate a range of phenomena, including physics, chemistry, biology, and more.”
– Temesgen Kindo
Traveling Waves, Solitons, and the Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) Equation
“The Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) equation, formulated in 1895 by Korteweg and de Vries, models water waves. It is a nonlinear PDE that introduces no dissipation, and the resulting waves travel seemingly forever. In 1965, Zabusky and Kruskal named such wavessolitons.
A more recent development is the application of theKdV equationto another type of traveling waves — light waves. Today, solitons are found in optical fibers. The linear dispersion properties of fibers level out waves, and the nonlinear properties give a focusing effect. This results in a pulse that is both very stable and long lived. Professor Uhlenbeck has studied this area oftraveling waves and solitonsfrom a mathematical point of view.”
– Magnus Ringh
Asoliton wave modeled with FEA software.
A Brief History of the Abel Prize
The Abel Prize was started by the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters in 2002. It is named after Niels Henrik Abel (1802–1829), a Norwegian mathematician who accomplished a lot by a young age. Abel did groundbreaking work in many fields of mathematics; for example, developing the first proof that you cannot solve a general, fifth-degree polynomial equation using radicals (expressions involving square roots, cube roots, etc.) Unfortunately, Abel passed away of tuberculosis at only 26 years old. The academy set up the award as a way to honor Abel and the contributions he made to mathematics during his brief life.
A Norwegian stamp commemorating Niels Henrik Abel, the namesake of the Abel Prize. Image in the public domain, viaWikimedia Commons.
Past recipients of the Abel Prize includeAndrew Wiles, a British mathematician who proved Fermat’s last theorem;John Tate, whose research greatly impacted the theory of numbers; andS. R. Srinivasa Varadhan, a main contributor to probability theory and large deviations.
Join us in extending our congratulations to Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck, 2019 Abel Prize Laureate and groundbreaking mathematician!
Further Reading
Learn more about Karen Keskulla Uhlenbeck and her work from the following resources:
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