<<

comm-yau.qxp 3/16/98 8:43 AM Page 610

S.-T. Yau Receives National Medal of Science

Shing-Tung Yau has Shing-Tung Yau was born on April 4, 1949, in received the Na- Kwuntung, . He received his Ph.D. from the tional Medal of Sci- , Berkeley, in 1971, where ence, the nation’s his advisor was S. S. Chern, who received the Na- highest scientific tional Medal of Science in 1975. In 1971 Yau went honor. On Decem- to the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) and the ber 16, 1997, Presi- following year became an assistant professor at the dent Clinton pre- State University of New York, Stony Brook. After sented medals to Yau and eight other that came appointments as professor at Stanford laureates in a cere- University (1974–79), professor at the IAS mony at the Old Ex- (1979–84), chair and professor at the University of ecutive Office Build- California, San Diego (1984–87), and professor at ing in Washington, (1987–present). Currently he is Shing-Tung Yau DC. also an adjunct professor at the Chinese Univer- Established by sity of Hong Kong. Yau held a Visiting Professor- Congress in 1959, the National Medal of Science ship and Sid Richardson Centennial Chair in Math- is bestowed annually by the president on a select ematics at the University of Texas at Austin in of individuals “deserving of special recog- 1986 and was a Fairchild Distinguished Scholar at nition by reason of their outstanding contribu- Caltech in 1990. During 1991–92, he was Wilson tions to knowledge in the physical, biological, T. S. Wang Distinguished Visiting Professor at the mathematical, or engineering sciences.” Congress Chinese University of Hong Kong and held a Spe- expanded this definition in 1980 to recognize out- cial Chair at the National Tsing Hua University in standing work in the social and behavioral sci- Hsinchu, Taiwan. ences. In 1962 President John F. Kennedy awarded Yau received a Fields Medal at the International the first Medal of Science to the late Theodore Congress of in in 1983. His Von Karman, president emeritus of aeronautical en- gineering at the California Institute of Technology. other awards and honors include the AMS Veblen Including the 1997 winners, 353 individuals have Prize (1981), the Carty Prize of the National Acad- been awarded the Medal of Science. In the past five emy of Sciences (1981), a MacArthur Fellowship years the National Medal of Science has been (1985), and the Crafoord Prize of the Royal Swedish awarded to four who work in the mathematical sci- Academy of Sciences (1994) (for an account of ences: Richard Karp and Steven Smale (1996), Mar- Yau’s research, see the announcement of the Cra- tin Kruskal (1994), and Alberto Calderón (1992). foord Prize, Notices, September 1994, page 794). Yau was honored “for profound contributions He is a member of the National Academy of Sci- to that have had a great impact on ences, the New York Academy of Sciences, and the fields as diverse as , , American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a general relativity and string theory. His work in- foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Sci- sightfully combines two different mathematical ences and a foreign academician of the Academia approaches and has resulted in the solution of Sinica. several long-standing and important problems in —Allyn Jackson mathematics.”

610 NOTICES OF THE AMS VOLUME 45, NUMBER 5