Paul Erdős Award
Encyclopedia
The Paul Erdős Award, named after Paul Erdős
Paul Erdos
Paul Erdős was a Hungarian mathematician. Erdős published more papers than any other mathematician in history, working with hundreds of collaborators. He worked on problems in combinatorics, graph theory, number theory, classical analysis, approximation theory, set theory, and probability theory...

, is given by the
World Federation of National Mathematics Competitions for those who "have played a significant role in the development of mathematical challenges at the national or international level and which have been a stimulus for the enrichment of mathematics learning". The awards haven been given in two-year periods since 1996.

Awardees

  • 1992:
    • Luis Davidson, Cuba
    • Nikolay Konstantinov, Russia
    • John Webb, South Africa

  • 1994:
    • Ronald Dunkley, Canada
    • Walter Mientka, USA
    • Urgengtserengiin Sanjmyatav, Mongolia
    • Jordan Tabov, Bulgaria
    • Peter Taylor, Australia
    • Qiu Zonghu, Peoples Republic of China

  • 1996:
    • George Berzsenyi, USA
    • Tony Gardiner, United Kingdom
    • Derek Holton, New Zealand

  • 1998:
    • Agnis Andzans, Latvia
    • Wolfgang Engel, Germany
    • Mark Saul, USA

  • 2000:
    • Francisco Bellot Rosado, Spain
    • István Reiman, Hungary
    • János Surányi, Hungary

  • 2002:
    • Bogoljub Marinkovic, Yugoslavia
    • Harold Braun Reiter, United States of America
    • Wen-Hsien Sun, Taiwan

  • 2004:
    • Warren Atkins, Australia
    • André Deledicq, France
    • Patricia Fauring, Argentina

  • 2006:
    • Simon Chua, Philippines
    • Ali Rejali, Iran
    • Alexander Soifer
      Alexander Soifer
      Alexander Soifer is a Russian-born American mathematician and mathematics author. His works include over 200 articles, and a number of books, listed below.Soifer received his Ph.D. in 1973....

      , USA

  • 2008:
    • Hans-Dietrich (Dieter) Gronau, Germany
    • Bruce Henry, Australia
    • Leou Shian, Taiwan

  • 2010"
    • Rafael Sanchez-Lamoneda, Venezuela
    • Yahya Tabesh, Iran

Source

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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