The William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition, often abbreviated to Putnam Competition, is an annual mathematics competition for undergraduate college students enrolled at institutions of higher learning in the United States and Canada (regardless of the students' nationalities). It awards a scholarship and cash prizes ranging from $250 to $2,500 for the top students and $5,000 to $25,000 for the top schools, plus one of the top five individual scorers (designated as Putnam Fellows ) is awarded a scholarship of up to $12,000 plus tuition at Harvard University (Putnam Fellow Prize Fellowship), [1] the top 100 individual scorers have their names mentioned in the American Mathematical Monthly (alphabetically ordered within rank), and the names and addresses of the top 500 contestants are mailed to all participating institutions. It is widely considered to be the most prestigious university-level mathematics competition in the world, and its difficulty is such that the median score is often zero or one (out of 120) despite being primarily attempted by students specializing in mathematics. [2] [3]
The competition was founded in 1927 by Elizabeth Lowell Putnam in memory of her husband William Lowell Putnam, who was an advocate of intercollegiate intellectual competition. The competition has been offered annually since 1938 and is administered by the Mathematical Association of America. [4]
The Putnam competition takes place on the first Saturday in December, and consists of two three-hour sittings separated by a lunch break. The competition is supervised by faculty members at the participating schools. Each one consists of twelve challenging problems. The problems cover a range of advanced material in undergraduate mathematics, including concepts from group theory, set theory, graph theory, lattice theory, and number theory. [5]
Each of the twelve questions is worth 10 points, and the most frequent scores above zero are 10 points for a complete solution, 9 points for a nearly complete solution, and 1 point for the beginnings of a solution. In earlier years, the twelve questions were worth one point each, with no partial credit given. The competition is considered to be very difficult: it is typically attempted by students specializing in mathematics, but the median score is usually zero or one point out of 120 possible, and there have been only five perfect scores as of 2021 [update] . [6] [7] In 2003, of the 3,615 students competing, 1,024 (28%) scored 10 or more points, and 42 points was sufficient to make the top percentile.
At a participating college, any student who wishes to take part in the competition may (limited by the number of spots a school receives); but until 2019 the school's official team consisted of three individuals whom it designated in advance. Until 2019, a team's score was the sum of the ranks of its three team members, with the lowest cumulative rank winning. It was entirely possible, even commonplace at some institutions, for the eventual results to show that the "wrong" team was picked—i.e. that some students not on the official team outscored an official team member. For example, in 2010, MIT had two of the top five scorers in the competition and seven of the top 24, while Caltech had just one student in the top five and only four in the top 24; yet Caltech took first place among teams while MIT took second. [8] In 2019 the rules of the competition changed, with a school's team consisting of its top three scorers, and team ranks determined by comparing the sums of the scores of the team members. [5]
The top five teams win $25,000, $20,000, $15,000, $10,000, and $5,000, in that order, with team members receiving $1,000, $800, $600, $400, and $200, respectively.
The top five individual scorers are named Putnam Fellows and awarded $2,500. The school with the first-place team receives an award of $25,000. Each first-place team member, as well as the winner of the Elizabeth Lowell Putnam Prize, receives $1,000. Sixth through 15th place individuals receive $1,000 and the next ten receive $250. The names of the top 100 students are published in the American Mathematical Monthly , and competition results are published in early April of the year following the competition. [9]
Many Putnam Fellows have gone on to become distinguished researchers in mathematics and other fields, including three Fields Medalists—John Milnor (also an Abel Prize laureate), David Mumford, and Daniel Quillen—and two Nobel laureates in physics—Richard Feynman and Kenneth Wilson.
Below is a table of teams by the number of appearances in the top five and number of titles.
The following table lists Teams finishing in Top Five (as of 2023 [update] competition):
Top Five | Team (s) |
---|---|
68 | Harvard |
53 | MIT |
33 | Caltech |
33 | Princeton |
20 | Toronto, Waterloo |
17 | Stanford |
12 | Yale, Duke |
11 | Chicago, Washington University in St. Louis |
10 | UC Berkeley, Cornell |
9 | Carnegie Mellon (including former Carnegie Tech) |
7 | UCLA |
6 | Columbia |
5 | Brooklyn College, City College of New York, Michigan State |
4 | Case Western Reserve (including former Case Tech), Michigan, Rice |
3 | Brooklyn Polytech, UC Davis, Queen's, Penn, Maryland |
2 | British Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvey Mudd |
1 | Cooper Union, Illinois Tech, Kansas, Kenyon, Manitoba, McGill, Miami University, RPI NYU, Oberlin, Stony Brook, Swarthmore, William Carey (under former name of Mississippi Woman's) |
For a recent analysis, the following table lists teams that finished in the top five since 2000 (as of 2023 [update] competition):
Top Five | Team (s) |
---|---|
22 | Harvard, MIT |
14 | Stanford |
11 | Princeton |
8 | Caltech, Duke |
6 | Carnegie Mellon |
5 | UCLA, Waterloo |
4 | Toronto |
3 | UC Berkeley |
1 | Chicago, Harvey Mudd, Stony Brook, Yale, RPI, Columbia, Maryland |
The following table lists Teams with First place finishes (as of 2023 [update] competition):
First Place | Team (s) |
---|---|
30 | Harvard |
13 | MIT |
10 | Caltech |
4 | Toronto, Washington University in St. Louis |
3 | Brooklyn College, Duke, Michigan State |
2 | Brooklyn Polytech, Cornell, Waterloo |
1 | UC Berkeley, UC Davis, Carnegie Mellon, Case Western Reserve, Chicago, Princeton, Queen's |
Since the first competition, the top five (or six, in case of a tie) scorers in the competition have been named Putnam Fellows. Within the top five, Putnam Fellows are not ranked. Students are not allowed to participate in the Putnam Competition more than four times. For example, if a high school senior chooses to officially participate, he/she effectively chooses to forfeit one of his/her years of eligibility in college (see Gabriel Carroll). This makes it even more of a remarkable feat to become a Putnam Fellow four times. In the history of the Competition, only eight students have been Putnam Fellows four times, with twenty-five others winning the award three times. The following table lists these students:
Name | School | Years | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Don Coppersmith | MIT | 1968 | 1969 | 1970 | 1971 |
Arthur Rubin | Purdue, Caltech | 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 |
Bjorn M. Poonen | Harvard | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 |
Ravi D. Vakil | Toronto | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 |
Gabriel D. Carroll | UC Berkeley, Harvard | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 |
Reid W. Barton | MIT | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 |
Daniel Kane | MIT | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 |
Brian R. Lawrence | Caltech | 2007 | 2008 | 2010 | 2011 |
Edward L. Kaplan | Carnegie Tech | 1939 | 1940 | 1941 | |
Andrew M. Gleason | Yale | 1940 | 1941 | 1942 | |
Donald J. Newman | City College of NY | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | |
James B. Herreshoff IV | UC Berkeley | 1951 | 1952 | 1953 | |
Samuel Jacob Klein | City College of NY | 1953 | 1959 | 1960 | |
Randall L. Dougherty | UC Berkeley | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | |
Eric D. Carlson | Michigan State | 1980 | 1982 | 1983 | |
David W. Ash | Waterloo | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | |
Noam D. Elkies | Columbia | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | |
David J. Grabiner | Princeton | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | |
David J. Moews | Harvard | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | |
J. P. Grossman | Toronto | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | |
Kiran S. Kedlaya | Harvard | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | |
Lenhard L. Ng | Harvard | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | |
Ciprian Manolescu | Harvard | 1997 | 1998 | 2000 | |
Aaron C. Pixton | Princeton | 2004 | 2005 | 2007 | |
Yufei Zhao | MIT | 2006 | 2008 | 2009 | |
Arnav Tripathy | Harvard | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | |
Seok Hyeong Lee | Stanford | 2008 | 2010 | 2011 | |
Evan M. O'Dorney | UC Berkeley, Harvard | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | |
Zipei Nie | MIT | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | |
David H. Yang | MIT | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | |
Yunkun Zhou | MIT | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | |
Shengtong Zhang | MIT | 2018 | 2019 | 2021 | |
Daniel Zhu | MIT | 2019 | 2021 | 2022 |
The following table lists all Putnam fellows from 1938 to present, with the years they placed in the top five. [10] Ioana Dumitriu was the first woman to become a Putnam Fellow, in 1996.
Name (School) | Year (s) |
---|---|
George W. Mackey (Rice) | 1938 |
Irving Kaplansky (Toronto) | 1938 |
Michael J. Norris (College of St. Thomas) | 1938 |
Robert W. Gibson (Fort Hays Kansas State) | 1938 |
Bernard Sherman (Brooklyn College) | 1938, 1939 |
Abraham Hillman (Brooklyn College) | 1939 |
Richard P. Feynman (MIT) | 1939 |
William Nierenberg (City College of NY) | 1939 |
Edward L. Kaplan (Carnegie Tech) | 1939, 1940, 1941 |
John Cotton Maynard (Toronto) | 1940 |
Robert Maughan Snow (George Washington) | 1940 |
W. J. R. Crosby (Toronto) | 1940 |
Andrew M. Gleason (Yale) | 1940, 1941, 1942 |
Paul C. Rosenbloom (UPenn) | 1941 |
Richard F. Arens (UCLA) | 1941 |
Samuel I. Askovitz (UPenn) | 1941 |
Harold Victor Lyons (Toronto) | 1942 |
Harvey Cohn (City College of NY) | 1942 |
Melvin A. Preston (Toronto) | 1942 |
Warren S. Loud (MIT) | 1942 |
Donald A. Fraser (Toronto) | 1946 |
Eugenio Calabi (MIT) | 1946 |
Felix Browder (MIT) | 1946 |
J. Arthur Greenwood (Harvard) | 1946 |
Maxwell A. Rosenlicht (Columbia) | 1946, 1947 |
Clarence Wilson Hewlett, Jr. (Harvard) | 1947 |
William Turanski (UPenn) | 1947 |
Eoin L. Whitney (Alberta) | 1947, 1948 |
W. Forrest Stinespring (Harvard) | 1947, 1949 |
George F. D. Duff (Toronto) | 1948 |
Harry Gonshor (McGill) | 1948 |
Leonard Geller (Brooklyn College) | 1948 |
Robert L. Mills (Columbia) | 1948 |
Donald J. Newman (City College of NY) | 1948, 1949, 1950 |
Ariel Zemach (Harvard) | 1949 |
David L. Yarmush (Harvard) | 1949 |
John W. Milnor (Princeton) | 1949, 1950 |
John P. Mayberry (Toronto) | 1950 |
Richard J. Semple (Toronto) | 1950 |
Z. Alexander Melzak (British Columbia) | 1950 |
Arthur P. Dempster (Toronto) | 1951 |
Harold Widom (City College of NY) | 1951 |
Herbert C. Kranzer (NYU) | 1951 |
Peter John Redmond (Cooper Union) | 1951 |
James B. Herreshoff IV (UC Berkeley) | 1951, 1952, 1953 |
Eugene R. Rodemich (Washington U in StL) | 1952 |
Gerhard Rayna (Harvard) | 1952 |
Richard G. Swan (Princeton) | 1952 |
Walter Lewis Baily, Jr. (MIT) | 1952 |
Marshall L. Freimer (Harvard) | 1953 |
Norman Bauman (Harvard) | 1953 |
Tai Tsun Wu (Minnesota) | 1953 |
Samuel Jacob Klein (City College of NY) | 1953, 1959, 1960 |
Benjamin Muckenhoupt (Harvard) | 1954 |
James Daniel Bjorken (MIT) | 1954 |
Leonard Evens (Cornell) | 1954 |
William P. Hanf (UC Berkeley) | 1954 |
Kenneth G. Wilson (Harvard) | 1954, 1956 |
Howard C. Rumsey, Jr. (Caltech) | 1955 |
Jack Towber (Brooklyn College) | 1955 |
David B. Mumford (Harvard) | 1955, 1956 |
Trevor Barker (Kenyon) | 1955, 1956 |
Everett C. Dade (Harvard) | 1955, 1957 |
Richard Michael Friedberg (Harvard) | 1956 |
David M. Bloom (Columbia) | 1956, 1957 |
J. Ian Richards (Minnesota) | 1957 |
Richard T. Bumby (MIT) | 1957 |
Rohit J. Parikh (Harvard) | 1957 |
David R. Brillinger (Toronto) | Spring 1958 |
Donald J. C. Bures (Queen's) | Spring 1958 |
Lawrence A. Shepp (Brooklyn Polytech) | Spring 1958 |
Richard M. Dudley (Harvard) | Spring 1958 |
Joseph Lipman (Toronto) | Spring 1958, Fall 1958 |
Alan Gaisford Waterman (San Diego State) | Fall 1958 |
John Rex Forrester Hewett (Toronto) | Fall 1958 |
Robert C. Hartshorne (Harvard) | Fall 1958 |
Alfred W. Hales (Caltech) | Fall 1958, 1959 |
Daniel G. Quillen (Harvard) | 1959 |
Donald Passman (Brooklyn Polytech) | 1959 |
Donald S. Gorman (Harvard) | 1959 |
Martin Isaacs (Brooklyn Polytech) | 1959 |
Stephen L. Adler (Harvard) | 1959 |
Stephen Lichtenbaum (Harvard) | 1959 |
Jon H. Folkman (UC Berkeley) | 1960 |
Louis Jaeckel (UCLA) | 1960 |
Melvin Hochster (Harvard) | 1960 |
William R. Emerson (Caltech) | 1960 |
Barry Wolk (Manitoba) | 1961 |
Elwyn R. Berlekamp (MIT) | 1961 |
Edward Anton Bender (Caltech) | 1961, 1962 |
John Hathaway Lindsey (Caltech) | 1961, 1962 |
William C. Waterhouse (Harvard) | 1961, 1962 |
John William Wood (Harvard) | 1962 |
Robert S. Strichartz (Dartmouth) | 1962 |
Joel H. Spencer (MIT) | 1963 |
Lawrence A. Zalcman (Dartmouth) | 1963 |
Lawrence J. Corwin (Harvard) | 1963 |
Robert E. Greene (Michigan State) | 1963 |
Stephen E. Crick, Jr. (Michigan State) | 1963 |
Barry B. MacKichan (Harvard) | 1964 |
Fred William Roush (UNC Chapel Hill) | 1964 |
Roger E. Howe (Harvard) | 1964 |
Rufus (Robert) Bowen (UC Berkeley) | 1964, 1965 |
Vern Sheridan Poythress (Caltech) | 1964 |
Andreas R. Blass (Detroit) | 1965 |
Barry Simon (Harvard) | 1965 |
Daniel Fendel (Harvard) | 1965 |
Lon M. Rosen (Toronto) | 1965 |
Marshall W. Buck (Harvard) | 1966 |
Robert E. Maas (Santa Clara) | 1966 |
Robert S. Winternitz (MIT) | 1966 |
Theodore C. Chang (MIT) | 1966 |
Richard C. Schroeppel (MIT) | 1966, 1967 |
David R. Haynor (Harvard) | 1967 |
Dennis A. Hejhal (Chicago) | 1967 |
Don B. Zagier (MIT) | 1967 |
Peter L. Montgomery (UC Berkeley) | 1967 |
Dean G. Huffman (Yale) | 1968 |
Gerald S. Gras (MIT) | 1968 |
Neal Koblitz (Harvard) | 1968 |
Gerald A. Edgar (UC Santa Barbara) | 1968, 1969 |
Don Coppersmith (MIT) | 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971 |
Alan R. Beale (Rice) | 1969 |
Steven K. Winkler (MIT) | 1969, 1970 |
Robert A. Oliver (Chicago) | 1969, 1970 |
Jeffrey Lagarias (MIT) | 1970 |
Jockum Aniansson (Yale) | 1970 |
Arthur Rubin (Purdue, Caltech) | 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973 |
Dale Peterson (Yale) | 1971 |
David Shucker (Swarthmore) | 1971 |
Robert Israel (Chicago) | 1971 |
Michael Yoder (Caltech) | 1971, 1972 |
Arthur Rothstein (Reed) | 1972 |
David Vogan (Chicago) | 1972 |
Dean Hickerson (UC Davis) | 1972 |
Ira Gessel (Harvard) | 1972 |
Angelos J. Tsirimokos (Princeton) | 1973 |
Matthew L. Ginsberg (Wesleyan) | 1973 |
Peter G. De Buda (Toronto) | 1973 |
David J. Anick (MIT) | 1973, 1975 |
Grant M. Roberts (Waterloo) | 1974 |
James B. Saxe (Union) | 1974 |
Karl C. Rubin (Princeton) | 1974 |
Philip N. Strenski (Armstrong State) | 1974 |
Thomas G. Goodwillie (Harvard) | 1974, 1975 |
Ernest S. Davis (MIT) | 1975 |
Franklin T. Adams (Chicago) | 1975 |
Christopher L. Henley (Caltech) | 1975, 1976 |
David J. Wright (Cornell) | 1976 |
Nathaniel S. Kuhn (Harvard) | 1976 |
Paul M. Herdig (Case Western Reserve) | 1976 |
Philip I. Harrington (Washington U in StL) | 1976 |
Steven T. Tschantz (UC Berkeley) | 1976, 1978 |
Adam L. Stephanides (Chicago) | 1977, 1981 |
Michael Roberts (MIT) | 1977 |
Paul A. Vojta (Minnesota) | 1977 |
Stephen W. Modzelewski (Harvard) | 1977 |
Russell D. Lyons (Case Western Reserve) | 1977, 1978 |
Mark R. Kleiman (Princeton) | 1978 |
Peter W. Shor (Caltech) | 1978 |
Randall L. Dougherty (UC Berkeley) | 1978, 1979, 1980 |
Charles H. Walter (Princeton) | 1979 |
Mark G. Pleszkoch (Virginia) | 1979 |
Miller Puckette (MIT) | 1979 |
Richard Mifflin (Rice) | 1979 |
Daniel J. Goldstein (Chicago) | 1980 |
Laurence E. Penn (Harvard) | 1980 |
Michael Raship (Harvard) | 1980 |
Eric D. Carlson (Michigan State) | 1980, 1982, 1983 |
Robin A. Pemantle (UC Berkeley) | 1981 |
Scott R. Fluhrer (Case Western Reserve) | 1981 |
David W. Ash (Waterloo) | 1981, 1982, 1983 |
Michael J. Larsen (Harvard) | 1981, 1983 |
Brian R. Hunt (Maryland) | 1982 |
Edward A. Shpiz (Washington U in StL) | 1982 |
Noam D. Elkies (Columbia) | 1982, 1983, 1984 |
Gregg N. Patruno (Princeton) | 1983 |
Benji N. Fisher (Harvard) | 1984 |
Daniel W. Johnson (Rose-Hulman Tech) | 1984 |
Richard A. Stong (Washington U in StL) | 1984 |
Michael Reid (Harvard) | 1984, 1987 |
Everett W. Howe (Caltech) | 1985 |
Keith A. Ramsay (Chicago) | 1985 |
Martin V. Hildebrand (Williams) | 1985 |
Douglas S. Jungreis (Harvard) | 1985, 1986 |
Bjorn M. Poonen (Harvard) | 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988 |
David I. Zuckerman (Harvard) | 1986 |
Waldemar P. Horwat (MIT) | 1986 |
David J. Grabiner (Princeton) | 1986, 1987, 1988 |
David J. Moews (Harvard) | 1986, 1987, 1988 |
Constantin S. Teleman (Harvard) | 1987 |
John S. Tillinghast (UC Davis) | 1987 |
Jeremy A. Kahn (Harvard) | 1988 |
Ravi D. Vakil (Toronto) | 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991 |
Andrew H. Kresch (Yale) | 1989 |
Christos A. Athanasiadis (MIT) | 1989 |
Colin M. Springer (Waterloo) | 1989 |
Sihao Wu (Yale) | 1989 |
William P. Cross (Caltech) | 1989 |
Jordan Lampe (UC Berkeley) | 1990 |
Raymond M. Sidney (Harvard) | 1990 |
Eric K. Wepsic (Harvard) | 1990, 1991 |
Jordan S. Ellenberg (Harvard) | 1990, 1992 |
Joshua B. Fischman (Princeton) | 1991 |
Xi Chen (Missouri–Rolla) | 1991 |
Samuel A. Kutin (Harvard) | 1991, 1992 |
Jeffrey M. Vanderkam (Duke) | 1992 |
Serban M. Nacu (Harvard) | 1992 |
Adam M. Logan (Princeton) | 1992, 1993 |
Craig B. Gentry (Duke) | 1993 |
Wei-Hwa Huang (Caltech) | 1993 |
J. P. Grossman (Toronto) | 1993, 1994, 1995 |
Kiran S. Kedlaya (Harvard) | 1993, 1994, 1995 |
Lenhard L. Ng (Harvard) | 1993, 1994, 1995 |
William R. Mann (Princeton) | 1994 |
Jeremy L. Bem (Cornell) | 1994, 1996 |
Sergey V. Levin (Harvard) | 1995 |
Yevgeniy Dodis (NYU) | 1995 |
Dragos N. Oprea (Harvard) | 1996 |
Ioana Dumitriu (NYU) | 1996 |
Robert D. Kleinberg (Cornell) | 1996 |
Stephen S. Wang (Harvard) | 1996 |
Daniel K. Schepler (Washington U in StL) | 1996, 1997 |
Ovidiu Savin (Pittsburgh) | 1997 |
Patrick K. Corn (Harvard) | 1997 |
Samuel Grushevsky (Harvard) | 1997 |
Mike L. Develin (Harvard) | 1997, 1998 |
Ciprian Manolescu (Harvard) | 1997, 1998, 2000 |
Ari M. Turner (Princeton) | 1998 |
Nathan G. Curtis (Duke) | 1998 |
Kevin D. Lacker (Duke) | 1998, 2001 |
Christopher C. Mihelich (Harvard) | 1999 |
Colin A. Percival (Simon Fraser) | 1999 |
Davesh Maulik (Harvard) | 1999 |
Derek I.E. Kisman (Waterloo) | 1999 |
Sabin Cautis (Waterloo) | 1999 |
Abhinav Kumar (MIT) | 1999, 2000 |
Pavlo Pylyavskyy (MIT) | 2000 |
Alexander B. Schwartz (Harvard) | 2000, 2002 |
Gabriel D. Carroll (UC Berkeley, Harvard) | 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 |
George Lee, Jr. (Harvard) | 2001 |
Jan K. Siwanowicz (City College of NY) | 2001 |
Reid W. Barton (MIT) | 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 |
Deniss Cebikins (MIT) | 2002 |
Melanie E. Wood (Duke) | 2002 |
Ralph C. Furmaniak (Waterloo) | 2003 |
Ana Caraiani (Princeton) | 2003, 2004 |
Daniel M. Kane (MIT) | 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 |
Vladimir V. Barzov (MIT) | 2004 |
Aaron Pixton (Princeton) | 2004, 2005, 2007 |
Oleg I. Golberg (MIT) | 2005 |
Matthew M. Ince (MIT) | 2005 |
Ricky I. Liu (Harvard) | 2005 |
Tiankai Liu (Harvard) | 2005, 2006 |
Hansheng Diao (MIT) | 2006 |
Po-Ru Loh (Caltech) | 2006 |
Yufei Zhao (MIT) | 2006, 2008, 2009 |
Jason C. Bland (Caltech) | 2007 |
Brian R. Lawrence (Caltech) | 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011 |
Qingchun Ren (MIT) | 2007, 2009 |
Xuancheng Shao (MIT) | 2007 |
Arnav Tripathy (Harvard) | 2007, 2008, 2009 |
Seok Hyeong Lee (Stanford) | 2008, 2010, 2011 |
Bohua Zhan (MIT) | 2008 |
William A. Johnson (U of Washington) | 2009 |
Xiaosheng Mu (Yale) | 2009, 2011 |
Yu Deng (MIT) | 2010 |
Colin P. Sandon (MIT) | 2010 |
Alex (Lin) Zhai (Harvard) | 2010 |
Samuel S. Elder (Caltech) | 2011 |
Evan M. O'Dorney (Harvard) | 2011, 2012, 2013 |
Benjamin P. Gunby (MIT) | 2012 |
Eric K. Larson (Harvard) | 2012 |
Mitchell M. Lee (MIT) | 2012, 2013 |
Zipei Nie (MIT) | 2012, 2013, 2014 |
Bobby C. Shen (MIT) | 2013, 2014 |
David H. Yang (MIT) | 2013, 2014, 2015 |
Ravi Jagadeesan (Harvard) | 2014 |
Mark A. Sellke (MIT) | 2014 |
Lingfu Zhang (MIT) | 2014 |
Pakawut Jiradilok (Harvard) | 2015 |
Bumsoo Kim (Princeton) | 2015 |
Gyujin Oh (Stanford) | 2015 |
Daniel Spivak (Waterloo) | 2015 |
Yunkun Zhou (MIT) | 2015, 2016, 2017 |
Joshua D. Brakensiek (Carnegie Mellon) | 2016 |
Dong Ryul Kim (Harvard) | 2016, 2018 |
Thomas E. Swayze (Carnegie Mellon) | 2016 |
Samuel Zbarsky (Carnegie Mellon) | 2016 |
David Stoner (Harvard) | 2017, 2018 |
Ömer Cerrahoğlu (MIT) | 2017 |
Jiyang Gao (MIT) | 2017 |
Junyao Peng (MIT) | 2017 |
Ashwin Sah (MIT) | 2017, 2019 |
Yuan Yao (MIT) | 2018, 2019 |
Shengtong Zhang (MIT) | 2018, 2019, 2021 |
Shyam Narayanan (Harvard) | 2018 |
Kevin Sun (MIT) | 2019 |
Daniel Zhu (MIT) | 2019, 2021, 2022 |
Andrew Gu (MIT) | 2021 |
Michael Ren (MIT) | 2021 |
Edward Wan (MIT) | 2021 |
Mingyang Deng (MIT) | 2022 |
Papon Lapate (MIT) | 2022, 2023 |
Brian Liu (MIT) | 2022, 2023 |
Luke Robitaille (MIT) | 2022, 2023 |
Ankit Bisain (MIT) | 2023 |
Jiangqi Dai (MIT) | 2023 |
Since 1992, the Elizabeth Lowell Putnam Award has been available to be awarded to a female participant with a high score, with three awards being made for the first time in 2019. [11] The year(s) in which they were Fellows are in bold. Ioana Dumitriu was the first woman to become a Putnam Fellow, in 1996.
Name | School | Year (s) |
---|---|---|
Dana Pascovici | Dartmouth | 1992 |
Ruth A. Britto-Pacumio | MIT | 1994 |
Ioana Dumitriu | NYU | 1995, 1996, 1997 |
Wai Ling Yee | Waterloo | 1999 |
Melanie E. Wood | Duke | 2001, 2002 |
Ana Caraiani | Princeton | 2003, 2004 |
Alison B. Miller | Harvard | 2005, 2006, 2007 |
Viktoriya Krakovna | Toronto | 2008 |
Yinghui Wang | MIT | 2011 |
Fei Song | Virginia | 2011 |
Xiao Wu | Yale | 2013 |
Simona Diaconu | Princeton | 2016 |
Ni Yan | UCLA | 2017 |
Danielle Wang | MIT | 2015, 2018 |
Laura Pierson | Harvard | 2019 |
Qi Qi | MIT | 2019 |
Hanzhi Zheng | Stanford | 2019 |
Dain Kim | MIT | 2021 |
Binwei Yan | MIT | 2022 |
Isabella Zhu | MIT | 2023 |
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Bjorn Mikhail Poonen is a mathematician, four-time Putnam Competition winner, and a Distinguished Professor in Science in the Department of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His research is primarily in arithmetic geometry, but he has occasionally published in other subjects such as probability and computer science. He has edited two books.
Henry Otto Pollak is an Austrian-American mathematician. He is known for his contributions to information theory, and with Ronald Graham is the namesake of the Graham–Pollak theorem in graph theory.
William Charles Waterhouse was an American mathematician. He was a professor emeritus of Mathematics at Pennsylvania State University, after having taught there for over 35 years. The early part of his career was at Cornell University. His research interests included abstract algebra, number theory, group schemes, and the history of mathematics.
Lenhard Ng is an American mathematician, working primarily on symplectic geometry. Ng is a professor of mathematics at Duke University.
Alison Beth Miller is an American mathematician who was the first American female gold medalist at the International Mathematical Olympiad. She also holds the distinction of placing in the top 16 of the Putnam Competition four times, the last three of which were recognized by the Elizabeth Lowell Putnam award for outstanding performance by a woman on the contest.
This is a timeline of women in mathematics.
Ioana Dumitriu is a Romanian-American mathematician who works as a professor of mathematics at the University of California, San Diego. Her research interests include the theory of random matrices, numerical analysis, scientific computing, and game theory.
Julia Pevtsova is a Russian-American mathematician who works as a professor of mathematics at the University of Washington. Her research concerns representation theory and in particular modular representation theory.
The Advantage Testing FoundationMath Prize for Girls, often referred to as The Math Prize for Girls, is an annual mathematics competition open to female high school students from the United States and Canada. The competition offers the world’s largest single monetary math prize in a math contest for young women. In 2017, the First-Place prize was $46,000 with another $9,000 divided among the remaining finalists. Girls may win a maximum of $100,000 by participating in the competition over multiple years. Organized each year by the Advantage Testing Foundation, the competition is considered to be the preeminent female math competition for young women in North America.