News Release

Recipients of the 2011 Clay Research Awards announced

Yves Benoist, Jean-François Quint and Jonathan Pila

Grant and Award Announcement

The Clay Mathematics Institute

The 2011 Clay Research Awards will be presented: to Yves Benoist (CNRS, Université de Paris Sud 11) and Jean-François Quint (CNRS Université de Paris 13) for their work on stationary measures and orbit closures; and to Jonathan Pila (Mathematical Institute, Oxford) for his resolution of the André-Oort Conjecture in the case of products of modular curves.

The award ceremony will take place at the 2011 Clay Research Conference, to be held May 16-17 at Harvard University in Science Center Lecture Hall A. Benoist, Pila, and Quint will speak on their work at that occasion.

CITATIONS

Yves Benoist and Jean-François Quint

For their spectacular work on stationary measures and orbit closures for actions of non-abelian groups on homogeneous spaces. This work is a major breakthrough in homogeneous dynamics and related areas of mathematics. In particular, Benoist and Quint proved the following conjecture of Furstenberg. Let H be a Zariski dense semisimple subgroup of a Lie group which acts by left translations on the quotient of G by a discrete subgroup with finite covolume. Consider a probability measure m on H whose support generates H. Then any m-stationary probability measure for such an action is H-invariant.

Jonathan Pila:

For his resolution of the Andre-Oort Conjecture in the case of products of modular curves. This work gives the first unconditional proof of fundamental cases of these general conjectures beyond the original theorem of André concerning the product of two such curves. The foundational techniques that Pila developed to achieve this breakthrough range from results in real analytic geometry which give sharp upper bounds for the number of rational points of bounded height on certain analytic sets, to the use of O-minimal structures in mathematical logic.

###

The Clay Mathematics Institute presents the Clay Research Award annually to recognize major breakthroughs in mathematical research. Awardees receive the bronze sculpture "Figureight Knot Complement VII/CMI" by sculptor Helaman Ferguson.

http://www.claymath.org


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.