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Smith's Prize

The Smith's Prize was the name of each of two prizes awarded annually to two research students in mathematics and theoretical physics at the University of Cambridge from 1769.[1] Following the reorganization in 1998, they are now awarded under the names Smith-Knight Prize and Rayleigh-Knight Prize.

History

The Smith Prize fund was founded by bequest of Robert Smith upon his death in 1768, having by his will left £3,500 of South Sea Company stock to the University. Every year two or more junior Bachelor of Arts students who had made the greatest progress in mathematics and natural philosophy were to be awarded a prize from the fund. The prize was awarded every year from 1769 to 1998 except 1917.

From 1769 to 1885, the prize was awarded for the best performance in a series of examinations. In 1854 George Stokes included an examination question on a particular theorem that William Thomson had written to him about, which is now known as Stokes' theorem.[2] T. W. Körner notes

Only a small number of students took the Smith's prize examination in the nineteenth century. When Karl Pearson took the examination in 1879, the examiners were Stokes, Maxwell, Cayley, and Todhunter and the examinees went on each occasion to an examiner's dwelling, did a morning paper, had lunch there and continued their work on the paper in the afternoon.[3]

In 1885, the examination was renamed Part III, (now known as the Master of Advanced Study in Mathematics for students who studied outside of Cambridge before taking it) and the prize was awarded for the best submitted essay rather than examination performance. According to Barrow-Green

By fostering an interest in the study of applied mathematics, the competition contributed towards the success in mathematical physics that was to become the hallmark of Cambridge mathematics during the second half of the nineteenth century.[1]

In the twentieth century, the competition stimulated postgraduate research in mathematics in Cambridge and the competition has played a significant role by providing a springboard for graduates considering an academic career. The majority of prize-winners have gone on to become professional mathematicians or physicists.

The Rayleigh Prize was an additional prize, which was awarded for the first time in 1911.

The Smith's and Rayleigh prizes were only available to Cambridge graduate students who had been undergraduates at Cambridge. The J.T. Knight Prize was established in 1974 for Cambridge graduates who had been undergraduates at other universities. The prize commemorates J.T. Knight (1942–1970), who had been an undergraduate student at Glasgow and a graduate student at Cambridge. He was killed in a motor car accident in Ireland in April 1970.

 
J.T. Knight

Value of the prizes

Originally, in 1769, the prizes were worth £25 each and remained at that level for 100 years. In 1867, they fell to £23 and in 1915 were still reported to be worth that amount.[citation needed] By 1930, the value had risen to about £30, and by 1940, the value had risen by a further one pound to £31. By 1998, a Smith's Prize was worth around £250.[1]

In 2007, the value of the three prize funds was roughly £175,000.[4]

Reorganization of prizes

In 1998 the Smith Prize, Rayleigh Prize and J. T. Knight Prize were replaced by the Smith-Knight Prize and Rayleigh-Knight Prize,[5] the standard for the former being higher than that required for the latter.

Smith's Prize recipients

For the period up to 1940 a complete list is given in Barrow-Green (1999) including titles of prize essays from 1889 to 1940. The following includes a selection from this list.

Awarded for examination performance

Awarded for essay

Rayleigh Prize recipients

A more complete list of Rayleigh prize recipients is given in Appendix 1 ("List of Prize Winners and their Essays 1885-1940") of[1]

J. T. Knight Prize recipients

  • 1974 Cameron Leigh Stewart[47] Allan J. Clarke
  • 1975 Frank Kelly[48] and Ian Sobey
  • 1976 Trevor McDougall
  • 1977 Gerard Murphy
  • 1981 Bruce Allen and Philip K. Pollett
  • 1983 Ya-xiang Yuan
  • 1985 Reinhard Diestel
  • 1987 Qin Sheng (mathematician)
  • 1988 Somak Raychaudhury
  • 1990 Darryn W. Waugh
  • 1991 Renzo L. Ricca
  • 1992 Grant Lythe, Christophe Pichon, Henrik O. Rasmussen
  • 1993 Anastasios Christou Petkou
  • 1994 Group 1: M. Gaberdiel, Y. Liu. Group 3: H.A. Chamblin. Group 4: P.P. Avelino, S.G. Lack, A.L. Sydenham. Group 5: S. Keras, U. Meyer, G.M. Pritchard, H. Ramanathan, K. Strobl. Group 6: A.O. Bender, V. Toledano Laredo.
  • 1996 Conor Houghton, Thomas Manke
  • 1997 Arno Schindlmayr
  • 1998 A. Bejancu, G. M. Keith, J. Sawon, D. R. Brecher, T. S. H. Leinster, S. Slijepcevic, K. K. Damodaran, A. R. Mohebalhojeh, C. T. Snydal, F. De Rooij, O. Pikhurko, David K. H. Tan, P. R. Hiemer, T. Prestidge, F. Wagner, Viet Ha Hoàng, A. W. Rempel and Jium-Huei Proty Wu

Smith–Knight Prize recipients

  • 1999 D. W. Essex, H. S. Reall, A. Saikia, A. C. Faul, Duncan C. Richer, M. J. Vartiainen, T. A. Fisher, J. Rosenzweig, J. Wierzba and J. B. Gutowski[49][50]
  • 2001 B. J. Green, T A. Mennim, A. Mijatovic, F. A. Dolan, Paul D. Metcalfe and S. R. Tod
  • 2002 Konstantin Ardakov,[51] Edward Crane[52] and Simon Wadsley[53]
  • 2004 Neil Roxburgh[54]
  • 2005 David Conlon[55]
  • 2008 Miguel Paulos
  • 2009 Olga Goulko
  • 2010 Miguel Custódio
  • 2011 Ioan Manolescu
  • 2014 Bhargav P. Narayanan[56]
  • 2018 Theodor Bjorkmo, Muntazir Abidi, Amelia Drew, Leong Khim Wong
  • 2020 Jef Laga, Kasia Warburton, Daniel Zhang, Shayan Iranipour
  • 2021 David Gwilym Baker, Hannah Banks, Jason Joykutty, Andreas Schachner, Mohammed Rifath Khan Shafi [57]

Rayleigh–Knight Prize recipients

  • 1999 C. D. Bloor, R. Oeckl, J. Y. Whiston, Y-C. Chen, P. L. Rendon, C. Wunderer, J. H. P. Dawes, D. M. Rodgers, H-M. Gutmann and A. N. Ross
  • 2001 A. F. R. Bain, S. Khan, S. Schafer-Nameki, N. R. Farr, J. Niesen, J. H. Siggers, M. Fayers, D. Oriti, M. J. Tildesley, J. R. Gair, M. R. E. H. Pickles, A. J. Tolley, S. R. Hodges, R. Portugues, C. Voll, M. Kampp, P. J. P. Roche and B. M. J. B. Walker[58]
  • 2004 Oliver Rinne
  • 2005 Guillaume Pierre Bascoul and Giuseppe Di Graziano
  • 2007 Anders Hansen[59] and Vladimir Lazić

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Barrow-Green, June (1999), "A Corrective to the Spirit of too Exclusively Pure Mathematics: Robert Smith (1689–1768) and his Prizes at Cambridge University", Annals of Science, 56 (3): 271–316, doi:10.1080/000337999296418
  2. ^ Katz, Victor (May 1979). "A History of Stokes' Theorem". Mathematics Magazine. 52 (3): 146–156. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1979.11976770. JSTOR 2690275.
  3. ^ , Cambridge University, 28 January 2009, archived from the original on 2 September 2009, retrieved 30 April 2009
  4. ^ Cambridge University Trust Funds p.34
  5. ^ Reporter 11/11/98: Graces submitted to the Regent House on 11 November 1998
  6. ^ Adams biography
  7. ^ Todhunter biography
  8. ^ http://www.clerkmaxwellfoundation.org/MathematicalTripos_Results2008_2_8.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  9. ^ Routh biography
  10. ^ Macdonald biography
  11. ^ The senior wranglers of the University of Cambridge, from 1748 to 1907
  12. ^ Hardy biography
  13. ^ Cunningham biography
  14. ^ Bateman biography 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Mercer biography
  16. ^ Turnbull biography
  17. ^ Berwick biography
  18. ^ .Obituary Notices : Livens, George Henry, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 111, p.159 Bibliographic Code: 1951MNRAS.111..159 [1]
  19. ^ Mordell biography
  20. ^ Obituary, Professor Sydney Chapman, An outstanding mathematical physicist, The Times [2]
  21. ^ Cook, Alan [rev.], "Jeffreys, Sir Harold (1891–1989)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, September 2004. Retrieved 11 January 2023. (subscription required)
  22. ^ Ince biography
  23. ^ Ingham biography
  24. ^ Milne biography
  25. ^ Burkill biography
  26. ^ Whittaker_John biography
  27. ^ Todd biography
  28. ^ http://www.math.toronto.edu/mpugh/Coxeter.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  29. ^ Cambridge University Reporter, 5 March 1952, Awards, p865
  30. ^ Cambridge University Reporter, 13 March 1957, Awards, p982
  31. ^ Ian Hacking Home Page
  32. ^ Kingman biography
  33. ^ Professor Stephen Watson's biography on the Emmanuel College website
  34. ^ Gordon James
  35. ^ Australian National University Research School of Earth Sciences
  36. ^ "Andrew Ranicki".
  37. ^ SPE AbuDhabi Section 14 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Personal, Gordon Ogilvie, retrieved 8 July 2009
  39. ^ Cambridge University Reporter 22/4/98: Awards
  40. ^ Mehra, Jagdish; Rechenberg, Helmut (2000), The Historical Development of Quantum Theory: The Fundamental Equations of Quantum Mechanics 1925-1926 : The Reception of the Quantum Mechanics 1925-1926, Springer, p. 54, ISBN 0-387-95178-4
  41. ^ William Hunter McCrea Biography, The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, retrieved 14 June 2009
  42. ^ Davenport biography
  43. ^ Assa Historical Section 25 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Koshy, Thomas (2004), Discrete mathematics with applications, Academic Press, p. 571, ISBN 0-12-421180-1
  45. ^ Staff Details 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ Susan Stepney's mini CV
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 March 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  48. ^ Frank Kelly's CV
  49. ^ Reporter 21/4/99: Awards
  50. ^ Queens' College Record 2000 25 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ http://www.maths.nottingham.ac.uk/personal/pmzka1/CV.pdf[permanent dead link]
  52. ^ http://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/crane/cv/cv.pdf[permanent dead link]
  53. ^ Jesus College Annual Report 2005 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine p.13
  54. ^ http://www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/nr264/cv.ps[permanent dead link]
  55. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 December 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  56. ^ (PDF). www.dpmms.cam.ac.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  57. ^ "Faculty Bulletins | Internal Resources".
  58. ^ Cambridge University Reporter
  59. ^ Anders Hansen

smith, prize, smith, prize, redirects, here, pennsylvania, academy, fine, arts, award, mary, smith, prize, name, each, prizes, awarded, annually, research, students, mathematics, theoretical, physics, university, cambridge, from, 1769, following, reorganizatio. Smith Prize redirects here For the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts award see Mary Smith Prize The Smith s Prize was the name of each of two prizes awarded annually to two research students in mathematics and theoretical physics at the University of Cambridge from 1769 1 Following the reorganization in 1998 they are now awarded under the names Smith Knight Prize and Rayleigh Knight Prize Contents 1 History 1 1 Value of the prizes 1 2 Reorganization of prizes 2 Smith s Prize recipients 2 1 Awarded for examination performance 2 2 Awarded for essay 3 Rayleigh Prize recipients 4 J T Knight Prize recipients 5 Smith Knight Prize recipients 6 Rayleigh Knight Prize recipients 7 See also 8 ReferencesHistory EditThe Smith Prize fund was founded by bequest of Robert Smith upon his death in 1768 having by his will left 3 500 of South Sea Company stock to the University Every year two or more junior Bachelor of Arts students who had made the greatest progress in mathematics and natural philosophy were to be awarded a prize from the fund The prize was awarded every year from 1769 to 1998 except 1917 From 1769 to 1885 the prize was awarded for the best performance in a series of examinations In 1854 George Stokes included an examination question on a particular theorem that William Thomson had written to him about which is now known as Stokes theorem 2 T W Korner notes Only a small number of students took the Smith s prize examination in the nineteenth century When Karl Pearson took the examination in 1879 the examiners were Stokes Maxwell Cayley and Todhunter and the examinees went on each occasion to an examiner s dwelling did a morning paper had lunch there and continued their work on the paper in the afternoon 3 In 1885 the examination was renamed Part III now known as the Master of Advanced Study in Mathematics for students who studied outside of Cambridge before taking it and the prize was awarded for the best submitted essay rather than examination performance According to Barrow Green By fostering an interest in the study of applied mathematics the competition contributed towards the success in mathematical physics that was to become the hallmark of Cambridge mathematics during the second half of the nineteenth century 1 In the twentieth century the competition stimulated postgraduate research in mathematics in Cambridge and the competition has played a significant role by providing a springboard for graduates considering an academic career The majority of prize winners have gone on to become professional mathematicians or physicists The Rayleigh Prize was an additional prize which was awarded for the first time in 1911 The Smith s and Rayleigh prizes were only available to Cambridge graduate students who had been undergraduates at Cambridge The J T Knight Prize was established in 1974 for Cambridge graduates who had been undergraduates at other universities The prize commemorates J T Knight 1942 1970 who had been an undergraduate student at Glasgow and a graduate student at Cambridge He was killed in a motor car accident in Ireland in April 1970 J T Knight Value of the prizes Edit Originally in 1769 the prizes were worth 25 each and remained at that level for 100 years In 1867 they fell to 23 and in 1915 were still reported to be worth that amount citation needed By 1930 the value had risen to about 30 and by 1940 the value had risen by a further one pound to 31 By 1998 a Smith s Prize was worth around 250 1 In 2007 the value of the three prize funds was roughly 175 000 4 Reorganization of prizes Edit In 1998 the Smith Prize Rayleigh Prize and J T Knight Prize were replaced by the Smith Knight Prize and Rayleigh Knight Prize 5 the standard for the former being higher than that required for the latter Smith s Prize recipients EditFor the period up to 1940 a complete list is given in Barrow Green 1999 including titles of prize essays from 1889 to 1940 The following includes a selection from this list Awarded for examination performance Edit 1769 George Atwood Thomas Parkinson 1770 William Smith James Oldershaw 1771 Thomas Starkie Roger Keddington 1772 George Pretyman Tomline John Lane 1773 John Jelland Brundish George Whitmore 1774 Isaac Milner Humphrey Waring 1775 Samuel Vince Henry William Coulthurst 1776 John Oldershaw W Wright 1777 David Owen John Baynes 1778 William Farish William Taylor 1779 Thomas Jones Herbert Marsh 1780 St John Priest William Frend 1781 T Catton Henry Ainslie 1782 James Wood John Hailstone 1783 Francis John Hyde Wollaston Joseph Proctor 1784 Robert Acklom Ingram John Holden 1785 William Lax John Dudley 1786 John Bell George Hutchinson 1787 Joseph Littledale Algernon Frampton 1788 John Brinkley Edmund Outram 1789 William Millers Joseph Bewsher 1790 Bewick Bridge Francis Wrangham 1791 Daniel Mitford Peacock William Gooch 1792 John Palmer George Frederick Tavel 1793 Thomas Harrison Thomas Strickland 1794 George Butler John Singleton Copley 1795 Robert Woodhouse William Atthill 1796 John Kempthorne William Dealtry 1797 John Hudson John Lowthian 1798 Thomas Sowerby Robert Martin 1799 William Fuller Boteler John Brown 1800 James Inman George D Oyley 1801 Henry Martyn William Woodall 1802 Thomas Penny White John Grisdale 1803 Thomas Starkie Charles James Hoare 1804 William Albin Garratt John Kaye 1805 Samuel Hunter Christie Thomas Turton D 1806 J F Pollock Henry Walter 1807 Henry Gipps John Carr 1808 Henry Bickersteth Miles Bland 1809 Edward Hall Alderson G C Gorham John Standly 1810 William Henry Maule Thomas Shaw Brandreth 1811 Thomas Edward Dicey William French 1812 Cornelius Neale Joseph William Jordan 1813 John Herschel George Peacock 1814 Richard Gwatkin Henry Wilkinson 1815 Charles George Frederick Leicester Frederick Calvert 1816 Edward Jacob William Whewell 1817 John Thomas Austen Temple Chevallier 1818 John George Shaw Lefevre John Hind 1819 Joshua King George Miles Cooper 1820 Henry Coddington Charles Smith Bird 1821 Henry Melvill Solomon Atkinson 1822 Hamnett Holditch Mitford Peacock 1823 George Biddell Airy Charles Jeffreys 1824 John Cowling James Bowstead 1825 James Challis W Williamson 1826 William Law William Henry Hanson 1827 Thomas Turner Henry Percy Gordon 1828 Charles Perry John Bailey 1829 William Cavendish Henry Philpott 1830 Edward Horatio Steventon James William Lucas Heaviside 1831 Samuel Earnshaw Thomas Gaskin 1832 Douglas Denon Heath Samuel Laing 1833 Alexander Ellice Joseph Bowstead 1834 Philip Kelland Thomas Rawson Birks 1835 Henry Cotterill Henry Goulburn 1836 Archibald Smith John William Colenso 1837 William Nathaniel Griffin Edward Brumell 1838 Thomas John Main James George Mould 1839 Percival Frost Benjamin Morgan Cowie 1841 George Gabriel Stokes 1842 Arthur Cayley 1843 John Couch Adams 6 1845 William Thomson and Stephen Parkinson 1848 Isaac Todhunter 7 and Alfred Barry 1852 Peter Guthrie Tait and Steele 8 1853 Thomas Bond Sprague and Robert Braithwaite Batty 1854 James Clerk Maxwell and Edward John Routh 9 1860 James Stirling 1861 William Steadman Aldis 1863 Robert Romer 1865 John Strutt 1868 John Fletcher Moulton and George Howard Darwin 1869 John Eliot 1870 Alfred George Greenhill and Richard Pendlebury 1872 Horace Lamb 1874 W W Rouse Ball 1875 William Burnside first and George Chrystal second 1878 John Edward Aloysius Steggall 1880 Joseph Larmor and J J Thomson Awarded for essay Edit 1886 Robert Franklin Muirhead 1888 Alfred Dixon 1889 Henry Baker 1891 Hector Munro Macdonald 10 and R A Sampson 1895 George Thomas Manley 11 1896 W S Adie Archibald Young Gipps Campbell and F W Lawrence 1897 E T Whittaker 1898 Ernest Barnes and Richard Cockburn Maclaurin 1901 G H Hardy and James Hopwood Jeans 12 equal 1904 Ebenezer Cunningham 13 1905 Harry Bateman 14 1906 George Rivers Blanco White 1907 Arthur Stanley Eddington 1908 J E Littlewood and James Mercer 15 1909 Herbert Turnbull 16 and George Neville Watson 1910 William Edward Hodgson Berwick 17 1911 George Henry Livens 18 1912 E H Neville Louis Mordell 19 1913 Sydney Chapman 20 1914 Bhupati Mohan Sen 1915 Harold Jeffreys 21 1918 Edward Lindsay Ince 22 and K A Rau 1921 Albert Ingham 23 and William Michael Herbert Greaves 1922 Edward Arthur Milne 24 1923 John Charles Burkill 25 1925 Llewellyn Hilleth Thomas 1927 Sydney Goldstein 1929 John Macnaughten Whittaker 26 1930 John Arthur Todd 27 and Raymond Paley 1931 H S M Coxeter 28 1935 Henry G Booker and L Howarth 1936 Alan Turing and E A Green 1937 E R Love and H R Pitt 1938 Fred Hoyle 1939 T A Easterfield and HNV Temperley 1940 I J Good and R E Macpherson 1949 Derek Taunt 1950 Abdus Salam and Brian Haselgrove 1952 Michael P Drazin 29 1957 Philip Gerald Drazin John Robert Ringrose 30 1960 Keith Moffatt and Ian Hacking 31 1962 Jayant Narlikar and John Kingman 32 1967 Stephen Watson 33 1969 C J S Clarke P G Dixon C J Myerscough A R White and J S Wilson 1970 Gordon Douglass James 34 1971 Douglas C Heggie 1972 Brian L N Kennett 35 and Andrew Ranicki 36 1975 Brian D Ripley 1976 Roger Heath Brown and Bernard Silverman 1978 James Stirling 1988 Andrew W Woods 37 1994 Group 1 G J McCaughan Group 2 P A Shah and S M Tobias Group 3 R A Battye and D R D Scott 1996 Gordon Ian Ogilvie 38 and Stephen Hewson 1998 S M Blanchflower and J A Dee 39 Rayleigh Prize recipients EditA more complete list of Rayleigh prize recipients is given in Appendix 1 List of Prize Winners and their Essays 1885 1940 of 1 1913 Ralph H Fowler 40 1923 Edward Collingwood 1927 William McCrea 41 1930 Harold Davenport 42 1937 David Stanley Evans 43 1951 Gabriel Andrew Dirac 44 1980 David Benson 45 1982 Susan Stepney 46 1994 Group 4 J D King A P Martin Group 5 K M Croudace J R Elliot 1998 P Bolchover O T Johnson R W Verrill R Bhattacharyya U A Salam S A Wright and T J HuntJ T Knight Prize recipients Edit1974 Cameron Leigh Stewart 47 Allan J Clarke 1975 Frank Kelly 48 and Ian Sobey 1976 Trevor McDougall 1977 Gerard Murphy 1981 Bruce Allen and Philip K Pollett 1983 Ya xiang Yuan 1985 Reinhard Diestel 1987 Qin Sheng mathematician 1988 Somak Raychaudhury 1990 Darryn W Waugh 1991 Renzo L Ricca 1992 Grant Lythe Christophe Pichon Henrik O Rasmussen 1993 Anastasios Christou Petkou 1994 Group 1 M Gaberdiel Y Liu Group 3 H A Chamblin Group 4 P P Avelino S G Lack A L Sydenham Group 5 S Keras U Meyer G M Pritchard H Ramanathan K Strobl Group 6 A O Bender V Toledano Laredo 1996 Conor Houghton Thomas Manke 1997 Arno Schindlmayr 1998 A Bejancu G M Keith J Sawon D R Brecher T S H Leinster S Slijepcevic K K Damodaran A R Mohebalhojeh C T Snydal F De Rooij O Pikhurko David K H Tan P R Hiemer T Prestidge F Wagner Viet Ha Hoang A W Rempel and Jium Huei Proty WuSmith Knight Prize recipients Edit1999 D W Essex H S Reall A Saikia A C Faul Duncan C Richer M J Vartiainen T A Fisher J Rosenzweig J Wierzba and J B Gutowski 49 50 2001 B J Green T A Mennim A Mijatovic F A Dolan Paul D Metcalfe and S R Tod 2002 Konstantin Ardakov 51 Edward Crane 52 and Simon Wadsley 53 2004 Neil Roxburgh 54 2005 David Conlon 55 2008 Miguel Paulos 2009 Olga Goulko 2010 Miguel Custodio 2011 Ioan Manolescu 2014 Bhargav P Narayanan 56 2018 Theodor Bjorkmo Muntazir Abidi Amelia Drew Leong Khim Wong 2020 Jef Laga Kasia Warburton Daniel Zhang Shayan Iranipour 2021 David Gwilym Baker Hannah Banks Jason Joykutty Andreas Schachner Mohammed Rifath Khan Shafi 57 Rayleigh Knight Prize recipients Edit1999 C D Bloor R Oeckl J Y Whiston Y C Chen P L Rendon C Wunderer J H P Dawes D M Rodgers H M Gutmann and A N Ross 2001 A F R Bain S Khan S Schafer Nameki N R Farr J Niesen J H Siggers M Fayers D Oriti M J Tildesley J R Gair M R E H Pickles A J Tolley S R Hodges R Portugues C Voll M Kampp P J P Roche and B M J B Walker 58 2004 Oliver Rinne 2005 Guillaume Pierre Bascoul and Giuseppe Di Graziano 2007 Anders Hansen 59 and Vladimir LazicSee also EditList of mathematics awardsReferences Edit a b c d Barrow Green June 1999 A Corrective to the Spirit of too Exclusively Pure Mathematics Robert Smith 1689 1768 and his Prizes at Cambridge University Annals of Science 56 3 271 316 doi 10 1080 000337999296418 Katz Victor May 1979 A History of Stokes Theorem Mathematics Magazine 52 3 146 156 doi 10 1080 0025570X 1979 11976770 JSTOR 2690275 Discussion on the establishment of a degree of Master of Mathematics and a degree of Master of Advanced Study Cambridge University 28 January 2009 archived from the original on 2 September 2009 retrieved 30 April 2009 Cambridge University Trust Funds p 34 Reporter 11 11 98 Graces submitted to the Regent House on 11 November 1998 Adams biography Todhunter biography http www clerkmaxwellfoundation org MathematicalTripos Results2008 2 8 pdf bare URL PDF Routh biography Macdonald biography The senior wranglers of the University of Cambridge from 1748 to 1907 Hardy biography Cunningham biography Bateman biography Archived 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mercer biography Turnbull biography Berwick biography Obituary Notices Livens George Henry Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Vol 111 p 159 Bibliographic Code 1951MNRAS 111 159 1 Mordell biography Obituary Professor Sydney Chapman An outstanding mathematical physicist The Times 2 Cook Alan rev Jeffreys Sir Harold 1891 1989 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition September 2004 Retrieved 11 January 2023 subscription required Ince biography Ingham biography Milne biography Burkill biography Whittaker John biography Todd biography http www math toronto edu mpugh Coxeter pdf bare URL PDF Cambridge University Reporter 5 March 1952 Awards p865 Cambridge University Reporter 13 March 1957 Awards p982 Ian Hacking Home Page Kingman biography Professor Stephen Watson s biography on the Emmanuel College website Gordon James Australian National University Research School of Earth Sciences Andrew Ranicki SPE AbuDhabi Section Archived 14 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine Personal Gordon Ogilvie retrieved 8 July 2009 Cambridge University Reporter 22 4 98 Awards Mehra Jagdish Rechenberg Helmut 2000 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory The Fundamental Equations of Quantum Mechanics 1925 1926 The Reception of the Quantum Mechanics 1925 1926 Springer p 54 ISBN 0 387 95178 4 William Hunter McCrea Biography The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive retrieved 14 June 2009 Davenport biography Assa Historical Section Archived 25 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine Koshy Thomas 2004 Discrete mathematics with applications Academic Press p 571 ISBN 0 12 421180 1 Staff Details Archived 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Susan Stepney s mini CV Cameron L Stewart Publications in seminar proceedings Archived from the original on 23 March 2011 Retrieved 23 March 2011 Frank Kelly s CV Reporter 21 4 99 Awards Queens College Record 2000 Archived 25 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine http www maths nottingham ac uk personal pmzka1 CV pdf permanent dead link http people maths ox ac uk crane cv cv pdf permanent dead link Jesus College Annual Report 2005 Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine p 13 http www damtp cam ac uk user nr264 cv ps permanent dead link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 December 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF www dpmms cam ac uk Archived from the original PDF on 1 July 2017 Retrieved 15 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Faculty Bulletins Internal Resources Cambridge University Reporter Anders Hansen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Smith 27s Prize amp oldid 1132991867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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