Jacob Fox

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Jacob Fox
Jacob fox (cropped).jpg
Fox at Oberwolfach in 2016
Born1984 (age 3839)
NationalityAmerican
Alma mater Princeton University
MIT
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Institutions Stanford University
Doctoral advisor Benny Sudakov

Jacob Fox (born Jacob Licht in 1984) is an American mathematician. He is a professor at Stanford University. His research interests are in Hungarian-style combinatorics, particularly Ramsey theory, extremal graph theory, combinatorial number theory, and probabilistic methods in combinatorics.

Fox grew up in West Hartford, Connecticut and attended Hall High School. As a senior he won second place overall and first place in his category in the annual Intel Science Talent Search, [2] also winning the Karl Menger Memorial Prize of the American Mathematical Society for his project. The project was titled "Rainbow Ramsey Theory: Rainbow Arithmetic Progressions and Anti-Ramsey Results" [3] and was based on a research project he did at a six-week summer camp in mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); [4] he also participated in an earlier high school mathematics program at Ohio State University. [5]

Mr. Fox was once unable to unfasten his necktie prior to a Freshman baseball game for the aforementioned Hall High Warriors. He was then unsuccessfully convinced by his head coach - and former Avon Old Farms (<nowiki>http://www.avonoldfarms.com/</nowiki>) Head Football Coach William 'Bill' Mella - (<nowiki>https://issuu.com/recordjournal/docs/mellafinal</nowiki>) to cut the tie from his neck. Mr. Fox fought for the tie's safety, which was eventually removed with no damage incurred by the tie...or the tie wearer

Fox became an undergraduate at MIT, and was awarded the 2006 Morgan Prize for several research publications in combinatorics. [5]

Fox completed his PhD in 2010 from Princeton University; his dissertation, supervised by Benny Sudakov, was titled Ramsey Numbers. [6]

After working in the mathematics department at MIT from 2010 to 2014, he joined the faculty of Stanford University in 2015. [7]

In 2010, Fox was awarded the Dénes Kőnig Prize, an early-career award of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics Activity Group on Discrete Mathematics. [8] He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2014. [9] He was awarded the Oberwolfach Prize in 2016. [10]

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References

  1. "The Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers: Recipient Details: Jacob Fox". NSF.
  2. Intel STS 2002 , retrieved December 9, 2017
  3. Goldstein, Gisele (September 2002), "AMS Menger Prizes at the 2002 ISEF" (PDF), Mathematics People, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 49 (8): 940
  4. "High-schoolers face off in national sci-tech contest at MIT", MIT News, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, November 7, 2001
  5. 1 2 "2005 Morgan Prize" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 53 (4): 479–480, April 2006
  6. Jacob Fox at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  7. Curriculum vitae (PDF), February 2015, retrieved December 9, 2017
  8. Alumnus Jacob Fox Wins the Konig Prize, Society for Science & the Public, August 23, 2010, retrieved December 9, 2017
  9. Invited section lectures, ICM 2014, archived from the original on January 23, 2020, retrieved December 9, 2017
  10. Oberwolfach Prize 2016 for Junior Mathematicians , retrieved February 11, 2018