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Joseph L. Doob Prize

American award for mathematics research books From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Joseph L. Doob Prize of the American Mathematical Society (AMS) awards $5,000 (U.S.) every three years for "a single, relatively recent, outstanding research book that makes a seminal contribution to the research literature, reflects the highest standards of research exposition, and promises to have a deep and long-term impact in its area."[1] The prize, endowed in 2005 by Paul and Virginia Halmos, is named in honor of AMS President Joseph L. Doob,[1] who was Paul Halmos's doctoral advisor in the department of mathematics at the University of Illinois. According to Paul Halmos, "Doob was the first well-informed modern mathematician in the department".[2] In order for a mathematical research book to be eligible for the prize, it must have been published within the past 6 calendar years of the year of its nomination.[1] The prize was originally named the AMS Book Prize,[3] but after the first award was renamed the Doob Prize.[4]

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Recipients

  • 2005 —William P. Thurston for Three-dimensional Geometry and Topology (Princeton University Press 1997)
  • 2008 — Enrico Bombieri and Walter Gubler for Heights in Diophantine Geometry (Cambridge University Press 2006)
  • 2011 — Peter Kronheimer and Tomasz Mrowka for Monopoles and Three Manifolds (Cambridge University Press 2007)
  • 2014 — Cédric Villani for Optimal Transport: Old and New (Springer Verlag 2009)
  • 2017 — John Friedlander and Henryk Iwaniec for Opera de Cribro (AMS, 2010)
  • 2020 — René Carmona and François Delarue for Probabilistic Theory of Mean Field Games with Applications (Springer, 2018)
  • 2023 — Bjorn Poonen for "Rational Points on Varieties" (American Mathematical Society, 2017)
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References

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