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International Mathematics Competition

The International Mathematics Competition (IMC) for University Students is an annual mathematics competition open to all undergraduate students of mathematics.[1] Participating students are expected to be at most twenty three years of age at the time of the IMC. The IMC is primarily a competition for individuals, although most participating universities select and send one or more teams of students. The working language is English.

The IMC is a residential competition and all student participants are required to stay in the accommodation provided by the organisers. It aims to provide a friendly, comfortable and secure environment for university mathematics students to enjoy mathematics with their peers from all around the world, to broaden their world perspective and to be inspired to set mathematical goals for themselves that might not have been previously imaginable or thought possible. Notably, in 2018 Caucher Birkar (born Fereydoun Derakhshani), an Iranian Kurdish mathematician, who participated in the 7th IMC[2] held at University College London in 2000, received mathematics' most prestigious award, the Fields Medal.[3][4] He is now a professor at Tsinghua University and at the University of Cambridge. In 2022 a Kyiv-born mathematician, Maryna Viazovska, was also awarded the Fields Medal.[5] She participated in the IMC as a student four times, in 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005. She is now a Professor and the Chair of Number Theory at the Institute of Mathematics of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland.

Students from over 200 universities from over 50 countries have participated over the first thirty competitions. At the 29th IMC in 2022 participants were awarded Individual Result Prizes, Fair Play Prizes and Most Efficient Team Leader Prizes.[6]

University College London[7] has been involved in the organisation of the IMC and Professor John E. Jayne[8] has served as the President from the beginning in 1994. The IMC runs over five or six days during which the competitors sit two five-hour examinations, each with five questions (six until 2008) chosen by a panel and representatives from the participating universities. Problems are from the fields of Algebra, Analysis (Real and Complex), Combinatorics and Geometry.[9]

History edit

The IMC began in 1994 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, with 49 participants, mostly from Bulgaria, and was hosted by Plovdiv University "Paisii Hilendarski". The 2nd, 3rd and 4th IMC were also hosted by Plovdiv University "Paisii Hilendarski" in Plovdiv. From 1996 to 1999 the IMC was one of the activities of the Structural Joint European Union TEMPUS Project #S_JEP-11087-96, entitled "Modular Education in Mathematics and Informatics",[10] which was the flag ship European Union TEMPUS Project[11] in Bulgaria at the time, aimed at bringing Bulgaria's university mathematics and computing degree programs into line with those in the European Union in preparation for Bulgaria's entry into the European Union. University College London was the Contractor for this European Union TEMPUS Project and Professor Jayne was the Coordinator of the Project. In 1998 the 5th IMC was moved to Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, and was hosted by both the South-West University "Neofit Rilski" in Blagoevgrad and the American University in Bulgaria. The 5th IMC had 80 participants from 9 countries.[12]

The 6th IMC was hosted by Eötvös Loránd University and held on Lake Balaton in Keszthely, Hungary, the 7th IMC was hosted by University College London in London, the 8th IMC was hosted by Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic, the 9th IMC was hosted by the University of Warsaw in Warsaw, Poland, the 10th IMC was hosted by Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, the 11th IMC was hosted by Ss. Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje in Skopje, Macedonia, the 12th IMC was hosted by American University in Bulgaria in Blagoevgrad, the 13th IMC was hosted by Odesa University in Odesa, Ukraine, the 14th IMC and 15th IMC were again hosted by the American University in Bulgaria in Blagoevgrad, and the 16th IMC was hosted by the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest. In 2009 the 16th IMC had 347 student participants and 65 teams. Since 2010 the IMC has been hosted by the American University in Bulgaria, in Blagoevgrad, with assistance from the South-West University "Neofit Rilski" in Blagoevgrad.[13] The 26th IMC had 360 student participants and 77 teams.[14] The 27th and 28th IMCs were held on-line due to the global pandemic. The 29th IMC was hybrid with both in-person and on-line participants. It had 663 student participants and 100 teams.[15] The 30th IMC returned to being on only in-person event. It had 393 student participants and 72 teams.[16]

Notable Past Award Winners edit

- Caucher Birkar, Fields Medal Winner and Professor at the University of Cambridge.

- Maryna Viazovska, Fields Medal Winner and Professor at EPFL.

- Nima Anari, Professor at Stanford University.

- Maryam Saeedi, Professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

- Ali Kakhbod, Professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

- Gabriel Kreindler, Professor at Harvard University.

- Martin D. Kassabov, Professor at Cornell University.

- Andrej Zlatoš, Professor at UC San Diego.

- Marianna Csörnyei, Professor at the University of Chicago.

- Florian Herzig, Professor at the University of Toronto.

- Simion Filip, Professor at the University of Chicago.

- Rasool Etesami, Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

- Behrouz Touri, Professor at the University of California, San Diego.

- Kaveh Kasebian, Professor at Virginia Tech.

- Naser Talebizadeh Sardari, Professor at Penn State University.

- Jalal Etesami, Professor at the Technical University of Munich.

- Sam Nariman, Professor at Purdue University.

- Gaku Liu, Professor at the University of Washington.

- Djordje Milicevic, Professor at Bryn Mawr College.

Summary edit

Number
Year
Host City
Host Country
Dates
1st IMC 1994 Plovdiv   Bulgaria 28 July–2 August
2nd IMC 1995 Plovdiv   Bulgaria 2–7 August
3rd IMC 1996 Plovdiv   Bulgaria 31 July–5 August
4th IMC 1997 Plovdiv   Bulgaria 30 July–4 August
5th IMC 1998 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 29 July–3 August
6th IMC 1999 Keszthely   Hungary 29 July–2 August
7th IMC 2000 London   England 26–31 July
8th IMC 2001 Prague   Czech Republic 19–25 July
9th IMC 2002 Warsaw   Poland 19–25 July
10th IMC 2003 Cluj-Napoca   Romania 25–31 July
11th IMC 2004 Skopje   North Macedonia 23–29 July
12th IMC 2005 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 22–28 July
13th IMC 2006 Odesa   Ukraine 20–26 July
14th IMC 2007 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 3–9 August
15th IMC 2008 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 25–31 July
16th IMC 2009 Budapest   Hungary 25–30 July
17th IMC 2010 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 24–30 July
18th IMC 2011 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 28 July–3 August
19th IMC 2012 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 26 July–1 August
20th IMC 2013 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 6–12 August
21st IMC 2014 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 29 July–4 August
22nd IMC 2015 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 27 July–2 August
23rd IMC 2016 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 25–31 July
24th IMC 2017 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 31 July–6 August
25th IMC 2018 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 22–28 July
26th IMC 2019 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 28 July–3 August
27th IMC 2020 ON-LINE ON-LINE 25–30 July
28th IMC 2021 ON-LINE ON-LINE 2–7 August
29th IMC 2022 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 1–7 August
30th IMC 2023 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 31 July–6 August
31st IMC 2024 Blagoevgrad   Bulgaria 05 August–11 August

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . imc-math.ddns.net. 28 July 2018. Archived from the original on 30 September 2018. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  2. ^ Draganova, C. "IMC – International Mathematics Competition for University Students". ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  3. ^ "Former IMC participant among winners of Fields medal – the 'Nobel prize for maths'". The Guardian. 1 August 2018. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  4. ^ . uicm2018.org. 2 August 2018. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  5. ^ Davis, Nicola; Sample, Ian (21 October 2022). "Fields medal: Kyiv-born professor and Oxford expert among winners". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  6. ^ "Prizes/Closing Ceremony IMC 2022". imc-math.org.uk. 21 October 2022. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
  7. ^ "UCL London's Global University". ucl.ac.uk. 5 November 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
  8. ^ "J E Jayne UCL Home Page". ucl.ac.uk. 20 July 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  9. ^ "Problems & Solutions IMC 2019". imc-math.org.uk. 28 July 2019. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  10. ^ "Structural Joint European Project #S_JEP-11087-96". ucl.ac.uk. 9 January 1996. Retrieved 3 February 2019.
  11. ^ "EU Tempus Programme". eacea.ec.europa.eu. 1 January 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  12. ^ "Fifth IMC 1998". imc-math.org.uk. 28 July 1998. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  13. ^ "Blagoevgrad hosts IMC". bnr.bg. 23 July 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  14. ^ "Participants and Teams IMC 2019". imc-math.org.uk. 28 July 2019. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  15. ^ "Participants and Teams IMC 2022". imc-math.org.uk. 21 October 2022. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  16. ^ "Participants and Teams IMC 2023". imc-math.org.uk. 2 October 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2023.

External links edit

  • IMC Official Website
  • Local site with problems, solutions, results
  • London Mathematical Society Newsletter March 2018, page 11
  • American Mathematical Society Opportunities "Contests and Competitions"
  • Profile at Student Competitions
  • American University in Bulgaria IMC News

international, mathematics, competition, university, students, annual, mathematics, competition, open, undergraduate, students, mathematics, participating, students, expected, most, twenty, three, years, time, primarily, competition, individuals, although, mos. The International Mathematics Competition IMC for University Students is an annual mathematics competition open to all undergraduate students of mathematics 1 Participating students are expected to be at most twenty three years of age at the time of the IMC The IMC is primarily a competition for individuals although most participating universities select and send one or more teams of students The working language is English The IMC is a residential competition and all student participants are required to stay in the accommodation provided by the organisers It aims to provide a friendly comfortable and secure environment for university mathematics students to enjoy mathematics with their peers from all around the world to broaden their world perspective and to be inspired to set mathematical goals for themselves that might not have been previously imaginable or thought possible Notably in 2018 Caucher Birkar born Fereydoun Derakhshani an Iranian Kurdish mathematician who participated in the 7th IMC 2 held at University College London in 2000 received mathematics most prestigious award the Fields Medal 3 4 He is now a professor at Tsinghua University and at the University of Cambridge In 2022 a Kyiv born mathematician Maryna Viazovska was also awarded the Fields Medal 5 She participated in the IMC as a student four times in 2002 2003 2004 and 2005 She is now a Professor and the Chair of Number Theory at the Institute of Mathematics of the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland Students from over 200 universities from over 50 countries have participated over the first thirty competitions At the 29th IMC in 2022 participants were awarded Individual Result Prizes Fair Play Prizes and Most Efficient Team Leader Prizes 6 University College London 7 has been involved in the organisation of the IMC and Professor John E Jayne 8 has served as the President from the beginning in 1994 The IMC runs over five or six days during which the competitors sit two five hour examinations each with five questions six until 2008 chosen by a panel and representatives from the participating universities Problems are from the fields of Algebra Analysis Real and Complex Combinatorics and Geometry 9 Contents 1 History 2 Notable Past Award Winners 3 Summary 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe IMC began in 1994 in Plovdiv Bulgaria with 49 participants mostly from Bulgaria and was hosted by Plovdiv University Paisii Hilendarski The 2nd 3rd and 4th IMC were also hosted by Plovdiv University Paisii Hilendarski in Plovdiv From 1996 to 1999 the IMC was one of the activities of the Structural Joint European Union TEMPUS Project S JEP 11087 96 entitled Modular Education in Mathematics and Informatics 10 which was the flag ship European Union TEMPUS Project 11 in Bulgaria at the time aimed at bringing Bulgaria s university mathematics and computing degree programs into line with those in the European Union in preparation for Bulgaria s entry into the European Union University College London was the Contractor for this European Union TEMPUS Project and Professor Jayne was the Coordinator of the Project In 1998 the 5th IMC was moved to Blagoevgrad Bulgaria and was hosted by both the South West University Neofit Rilski in Blagoevgrad and the American University in Bulgaria The 5th IMC had 80 participants from 9 countries 12 The 6th IMC was hosted by Eotvos Lorand University and held on Lake Balaton in Keszthely Hungary the 7th IMC was hosted by University College London in London the 8th IMC was hosted by Charles University in Prague Czech Republic the 9th IMC was hosted by the University of Warsaw in Warsaw Poland the 10th IMC was hosted by Babeș Bolyai University in Cluj Napoca Romania the 11th IMC was hosted by Ss Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje in Skopje Macedonia the 12th IMC was hosted by American University in Bulgaria in Blagoevgrad the 13th IMC was hosted by Odesa University in Odesa Ukraine the 14th IMC and 15th IMC were again hosted by the American University in Bulgaria in Blagoevgrad and the 16th IMC was hosted by the Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest In 2009 the 16th IMC had 347 student participants and 65 teams Since 2010 the IMC has been hosted by the American University in Bulgaria in Blagoevgrad with assistance from the South West University Neofit Rilski in Blagoevgrad 13 The 26th IMC had 360 student participants and 77 teams 14 The 27th and 28th IMCs were held on line due to the global pandemic The 29th IMC was hybrid with both in person and on line participants It had 663 student participants and 100 teams 15 The 30th IMC returned to being on only in person event It had 393 student participants and 72 teams 16 Notable Past Award Winners edit Caucher Birkar Fields Medal Winner and Professor at the University of Cambridge Maryna Viazovska Fields Medal Winner and Professor at EPFL Nima Anari Professor at Stanford University Maryam Saeedi Professor at Carnegie Mellon University Ali Kakhbod Professor at the University of California Berkeley Gabriel Kreindler Professor at Harvard University Martin D Kassabov Professor at Cornell University Andrej Zlatos Professor at UC San Diego Marianna Csornyei Professor at the University of Chicago Florian Herzig Professor at the University of Toronto Simion Filip Professor at the University of Chicago Rasool Etesami Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Behrouz Touri Professor at the University of California San Diego Kaveh Kasebian Professor at Virginia Tech Naser Talebizadeh Sardari Professor at Penn State University Jalal Etesami Professor at the Technical University of Munich Sam Nariman Professor at Purdue University Gaku Liu Professor at the University of Washington Djordje Milicevic Professor at Bryn Mawr College Summary editNumber Year Host City Host Country Dates1st IMC 1994 Plovdiv nbsp Bulgaria 28 July 2 August2nd IMC 1995 Plovdiv nbsp Bulgaria 2 7 August3rd IMC 1996 Plovdiv nbsp Bulgaria 31 July 5 August4th IMC 1997 Plovdiv nbsp Bulgaria 30 July 4 August5th IMC 1998 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 29 July 3 August6th IMC 1999 Keszthely nbsp Hungary 29 July 2 August7th IMC 2000 London nbsp England 26 31 July8th IMC 2001 Prague nbsp Czech Republic 19 25 July9th IMC 2002 Warsaw nbsp Poland 19 25 July10th IMC 2003 Cluj Napoca nbsp Romania 25 31 July11th IMC 2004 Skopje nbsp North Macedonia 23 29 July12th IMC 2005 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 22 28 July13th IMC 2006 Odesa nbsp Ukraine 20 26 July14th IMC 2007 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 3 9 August15th IMC 2008 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 25 31 July16th IMC 2009 Budapest nbsp Hungary 25 30 July17th IMC 2010 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 24 30 July18th IMC 2011 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 28 July 3 August19th IMC 2012 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 26 July 1 August20th IMC 2013 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 6 12 August21st IMC 2014 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 29 July 4 August22nd IMC 2015 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 27 July 2 August23rd IMC 2016 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 25 31 July24th IMC 2017 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 31 July 6 August25th IMC 2018 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 22 28 July26th IMC 2019 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 28 July 3 August27th IMC 2020 ON LINE ON LINE 25 30 July28th IMC 2021 ON LINE ON LINE 2 7 August29th IMC 2022 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 1 7 August30th IMC 2023 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 31 July 6 August31st IMC 2024 Blagoevgrad nbsp Bulgaria 05 August 11 AugustSee also editList of mathematics competitions Intermediate Mathematical ChallengeReferences edit Welcome to the IMC2018 imc math ddns net 28 July 2018 Archived from the original on 30 September 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2018 Draganova C IMC International Mathematics Competition for University Students ucl ac uk Retrieved 2 August 2018 Former IMC participant among winners of Fields medal the Nobel prize for maths The Guardian 1 August 2018 Retrieved 19 October 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians Fields Medalists uicm2018 org 2 August 2018 Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 7 November 2018 Davis Nicola Sample Ian 21 October 2022 Fields medal Kyiv born professor and Oxford expert among winners TheGuardian com Retrieved 21 October 2022 Prizes Closing Ceremony IMC 2022 imc math org uk 21 October 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2022 UCL London s Global University ucl ac uk 5 November 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2018 J E Jayne UCL Home Page ucl ac uk 20 July 2018 Retrieved 7 November 2018 Problems amp Solutions IMC 2019 imc math org uk 28 July 2019 Retrieved 5 November 2019 Structural Joint European Project S JEP 11087 96 ucl ac uk 9 January 1996 Retrieved 3 February 2019 EU Tempus Programme eacea ec europa eu 1 January 2013 Retrieved 13 January 2019 Fifth IMC 1998 imc math org uk 28 July 1998 Retrieved 26 January 2020 Blagoevgrad hosts IMC bnr bg 23 July 2017 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Participants and Teams IMC 2019 imc math org uk 28 July 2019 Retrieved 5 November 2019 Participants and Teams IMC 2022 imc math org uk 21 October 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Participants and Teams IMC 2023 imc math org uk 2 October 2023 Retrieved 2 October 2023 External links editIMC Official Website Local site with problems solutions results London Mathematical Society Newsletter March 2018 page 11 American Mathematical Society Opportunities Contests and Competitions Profile at Student Competitions American University in Bulgaria IMC News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Mathematics Competition amp oldid 1218936784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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