Graduate Students Win Outstanding Teaching Assistant Awards
Three graduate students in Applied Math have won outstanding TA awards for 2014-2015.Ìý
Three graduate students in Applied Math have won outstanding TA awards for 2014-2015.Ìý
Three Applied Math graduate students competed in the 2015 Three-Minute Thesis competition, in which students have one slide and three minutes to explain their thesis research to a general audience.Ìý
The Physics News website has highlighted work by three applied math researchers: PhD student Robert Jonsson, Research Assistant Professor Eduardo MartÃn-MartÃnez, and Professor Achim Kempf.Ìý
Applied math undergraduate Shouzhen Gu, along with teammates Shun Da Suo and Wuhan Zhou in the BBA/BCS program, have won a silver medal in the 2014 Ìýfor their contribution on circumbinary planets. The competition attracted contributions from 131 teams, and awarded 2 gold and 23 silver medals.
The following Applied Mathematics students who were awarded scholarships for 2014-2015Ìýwere honoured at the Annual Faculty of Mathematics Banquet:
Applied Mathematics Master's student, Tawsif Khan, won the Faculty of MathematicsÌý3-minute thesis heat held on March 3, 2015, with his talk titled "Optimal Sensor Location".Ìý
Researchers from Applied Math, along with colleagues at the Harvard Medical School, have found a new approach for attacking drug resistant cancer cells.Ìý
The À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ International Genetically Engineered Machine competition (iGEM) team recently won Gold Standing and Best Model at the Giant Jamboree.Ìý
Eduardo Martin-Martinez, a research assistant professor in Applied Mathematics and the Institute for Quantum Computing, has won the Polanyi Prize for physics for his research on gravity and quantum theory. Polyani prizes are awarded annually to five early career researchers in Ontario in the areas of chemistry, economic science, literature, physics and physiology/medicine.
Thirteen graduate degrees in Applied Mathematics were awarded at the Fall 2014 convocation: