I know I posted a Woman of the Day less than 24 hours ago, but tomorrow I won't have internet access, so I thought I'd post now.
Maryam Mirzakhani (Persian: مریم میرزاخانی, pronounced [mæɾˈjæm miːɾzɑːxɑːˈniː]; 12 May 1977 – 14 July 2017) was an Iranian mathematician and a professor of mathematics at Stanford University. Her research topics included Teichmüller theory, hyperbolic geometry, ergodic theory, and symplectic geometry. On 13 August 2014, Mirzakhani was honored with the Fields Medal, the most prestigious award in mathematics, becoming the first Iranian to be honored with the award and the first of only two women to date. The award committee cited her work in "the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli spaces".
On 14 July 2017, Mirzakhani died of breast cancer at the age of 40.
Mirzakhani was born on 12 May 1977[13][3] in Tehran, Iran. As a child, she attended Tehran Farzanegan School, part of the National Organization for Development of Exceptional Talents (NODET). In her junior and senior years of high school, she won the gold medal for mathematics in the Iranian National Olympiad, thus allowing her to bypass the national college entrance exam. In 1994, Mirzakhani became the first Iranian woman to win a gold medal at the International Mathematical Olympiad in Hong Kong, scoring 41 out of 42 points. The following year, in Toronto, she became the first Iranian to achieve the full score and to win two gold medals in the International Mathematical Olympiad. Later in her life, she collaborated with friend, colleague, and Olympiad silver medalist, Roya Beheshti Zavareh (Persian: رؤیا بهشتی زواره), on their book 'Elementary Number Theory, Challenging Problems', (in Persian) which was published in 1999. Mirzakhani and Zavareh together were the first women to compete in the Iranian National Mathematical Olympiad and won gold and silver medals in 1995, respectively.
On 17 March 1998, after attending a conference consisting of gifted individuals and former Olympiad competitors, Mirzakhani and Zavareh, along with other attendees, boarded a bus in Ahvaz en route to Tehran. The bus was involved in an accident wherein it fell off a cliff, killing seven of the passengers—all Sharif University students. This incident is widely considered a national tragedy in Iran. Mirzakhani and Zavareh were two of the few survivors.
In 1999, she obtained a Bachelor of Science in mathematics from the Sharif University of Technology. During her time there, she received recognition from the American Mathematical Society for her work in developing a simple proof of the theorem of Schur. She then went to the United States for graduate work, earning a PhD in 2004 from Harvard University, where she worked under the supervision of the Fields Medalist, Curtis T. McMullen. At Harvard, she is said to have been "distinguished by determination and relentless questioning". She used to take her class notes in her native language Persian.
Mirzakhani was a 2004 research fellow of the Clay Mathematics Institute and a professor at Princeton University. In 2009, she became a professor at Stanford University.
Mirzakhani made several contributions to the theory of moduli spaces of Riemann surfaces. Mirzakhani's early work solved the problem of counting simple closed geodesics on hyperbolic Riemann surfaces by finding a relationship to volume calculations on moduli space. Geodesics are the natural generalization of the idea of a "straight line" to "curved spaces". Slightly more formally, a curve is a geodesic if no slight deformation can make it shorter. Closed geodesics are geodesics which are also closed curves—that is, they are curves that close up into loops. A closed geodesic is simple if it does not cross itself.
A previous result, known as the "prime number theorem for geodesics", established that the number of closed geodesics of length less than L L grows exponentially with L L – it is asymptotic to e L / L {\displaystyle e^{L}/L}. However, the analogous counting problem for simple closed geodesics remained open, despite being "the key object to unlocking the structure and geometry of the whole surface," according to University of Chicago topologist Benson Farb. Mirzakhani's 2004 PhD thesis solved this problem, showing that the number of simple closed geodesics of length less than L L is polynomial in L L. Explicitly, it is asymptotic to c L 6 g − 6 {\displaystyle cL^{6g-6}}, where g g is the genus (roughly, the number of "holes") and c c is a constant depending on the hyperbolic structure. This result can be seen as a generalization of the theorem of the three geodesics for spherical surfaces.
Mirzakhani solved this counting problem by relating it to the problem of computing volumes in moduli space—a space whose points correspond to different complex structures on a surface genus g g. In her thesis, Mirzakhani found a volume formula for the moduli space of bordered Riemann surfaces of genus g g with n n geodesic boundary components. From this formula followed the counting for simple closed geodesics mentioned above, as well as a number of other results. This led her to obtain a new proof for the formula discovered by Edward Witten and Maxim Kontsevich on the intersection numbers of tautological classes on moduli space.[
Her subsequent work focused on Teichmüller dynamics of moduli space. In particular, she was able to prove the long-standing conjecture that William Thurston's earthquake flow on Teichmüller space is ergodic. One can construct a simple earthquake map by cutting a surface along a finite number of disjoint simple closed geodesics, sliding the edges of each of these cut past each other by some amount, and closing the surface back up. One can imagine the surface being cut by strike-slip faults. An earthquake is a sort of limit of simple earthquakes, where one has an infinite number of geodesics, and instead of attaching a positive real number to each geodesic, one puts a measure on them.
In 2014, with Alex Eskin and with input from Amir Mohammadi, Mirzakhani proved that complex geodesics and their closures in moduli space are surprisingly regular, rather than irregular or fractal.The closures of complex geodesics are algebraic objects defined in terms of polynomials and therefore, they have certain rigidity properties, which is analogous to a celebrated result that Marina Ratner arrived at during the 1990s.The International Mathematical Union said in its press release that "It is astounding to find that the rigidity in homogeneous spaces has an echo in the inhomogeneous world of moduli space."
Mirzakhani was awarded the Fields Medal in 2014 for "her outstanding contributions to the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli spaces". The award was made in Seoul at the International Congress of Mathematicians on 13 August. At the time of the award, Jordan Ellenberg explained her research to a popular audience:
[Her] work expertly blends dynamics with geometry. Among other things, she studies billiards. But now, in a move very characteristic of modern mathematics, it gets kind of meta: She considers not just one billiard table, but the universe of all possible billiard tables. And the kind of dynamics she studies doesn't directly concern the motion of the billiards on the table, but instead a transformation of the billiard table itself, which is changing its shape in a rule-governed way; if you like, the table itself moves like a strange planet around the universe of all possible tables ... This isn't the kind of thing you do to win at pool, but it's the kind of thing you do to win a Fields Medal. And it's what you need to do in order to expose the dynamics at the heart of geometry; for there's no question that they're there.[36]
In 2014, President Hassan Rouhani of Iran congratulated her for winning the topmost world mathematics prize.
Mirzakhani has an Erdős number of 3.
Mirzakhani was awarded the Fields Medal in 2014 for "her outstanding contributions to the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli spaces". The award was made in Seoul at the International Congress of Mathematicians on 13 August. At the time of the award, Jordan Ellenberg explained her research to a popular audience:
[Her] work expertly blends dynamics with geometry. Among other things, she studies billiards. But now, in a move very characteristic of modern mathematics, it gets kind of meta: She considers not just one billiard table, but the universe of all possible billiard tables. And the kind of dynamics she studies doesn't directly concern the motion of the billiards on the table, but instead a transformation of the billiard table itself, which is changing its shape in a rule-governed way; if you like, the table itself moves like a strange planet around the universe of all possible tables ... This isn't the kind of thing you do to win at pool, but it's the kind of thing you do to win a Fields Medal. And it's what you need to do in order to expose the dynamics at the heart of geometry; for there's no question that they're there.
In 2014, President Hassan Rouhani of Iran congratulated her for winning the topmost world mathematics prize.
Mirzakhani has an Erdős number of 3.
Oh kid. You have a mustache. Not one part of you passes for female. You just have a lot of people in your life who are afraid they will hurt or anger you with the truth.
To be fair, I have a moustache 😆 dark haired women ‘problems’ too!
I'm blond and I have one too 😅 but we aren't on the Internet bragging about about being introduced as nieces with 5 o'clock shadow on full display. 😁
Yeah; I am afraid I have about as much of a moustache as he does, or will once I'm older.
But he also looks a bit like that actor who played Aurelius Dumbledore (forgot the other name) in Fantastic Beasts. (You know, the one with the enby identity who is violent against women?)
A tiiiny bit androgynous, but in a dudely way.
Oh no, kylo ren got into his mum's makeup again
THAT's who he reminds me of! 🤣
Lol he's like Kylo Ren if you ordered him from Temu
Weird, I didn’t wear makeup or gek clothes(?) to work today, everyone assumed I was female right away and I didn’t feel the need to cry about it? Maybe because I’m just a real woman.
Right? Today I went to a job interview with no makeup, unshaven, hair in a simple pony. I nailed it and an hour later, they called to offer me the job.
Tims can die mad about it
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Thank you! I took it and I'm very happy. I've been looking for over a year
His picture makes me think of Lou Diamond Phillips in Young Guns, not "Girl!"
LMFAO
You gotta read between the lines
The aunt and her friend are both legally blind and have no sense of smell
Do you ever just see these kids and either want to make them see reality or just hug them? This movement is devouring young people. It’s horrifying
It is horrifying. I don’t want to hug them, or be anywhere near them, but I do feel bad for them in the same way that I feel bad for the Scientologists forced to scrub toilets with toothbrushes. They’re caught up in a nightmare of their own creation and that does make me pity them.
I also regret that our society is feeding this.
I dont want to hug them.
Ditto. At least not the tims. More like spray them with Raid
Whatever the opposite of a hug is, that I wanna do
Ive seen some of the confused, not entitled obnoxious ones and I feel so bad for them.
The girls, sometimes. Boys who choose to identify as girls because they've been groomed into by Reddit and porn, not so much.
They’re laughing at you and mocking you, sir. But we’ll done for being too dense and porn-blinded that you can’t see it.
One day they'll realise that most people out there are actually far kinder than they thought they were and quite hesitant to hurt another person's feelings.
It's just occurred to me that they can't imagine that other people would actually be nice to them because it would never cross their own minds to be nice to other people.
Or it could be low self-esteem or previous experiences of bullying. It could be a lot of things, it’s hard to know.
Yes. Most people actually do want to be kind, or at least polite. They don't really think he's a woman, he's just recognizable as one of a group of men whom we've been told are desperately in of infinite kindness from strangers and passing acquaintances.