Cole Prize
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The Cole Prize is one of two prizes awarded to mathematicians by the American Mathematical Society, one for an outstanding contribution to algebra, and the other for an outstanding contribution to number theory. The prize is named after Frank Nelson Cole, who served the Society for 25 years.
The first award for algebra was made in 1928 to L. E. Dickson, for his book Algebren und ihre Zahlentheorie, Orell Füssli, Zürich and Leipzig, 1927, while the first award for number theory was made in 1931 to H. S. Vandiver, for papers dealing with Fermat's last theorem.
Although eligibility for the prize is not fully international, they are awarded to members of the Society and those who publish outstanding work in leading American journals.
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[edit] Algebra Prize awards
- 1928 L. E. Dickson
- 1939 A. Adrian Albert
- 1944 Oscar Zariski
- 1949 Richard Brauer
- 1954 Harish-Chandra
- 1960 Serge Lang, Maxwell A. Rosenlicht
- 1965 Walter Feit, John G. Thompson
- 1970 John R. Stallings, Richard G. Swan
- 1975 Hyman Bass, Daniel G. Quillen
- 1980 Michael Aschbacher, Melvin Hochster
- 1985 George Lusztig
- 1990 Shigefumi Mori
- 1995 Michel Raynaud, David Harbater
- 2000 Andrei Suslin, Aise Johan de Jong
- 2003 Hiraku Nakajima
For full citations, see external links.
[edit] Number Theory Prize awards
- 1931 H. S. Vandiver
- 1941 Claude Chevalley
- 1946 H. B. Mann
- 1951 Paul Erdős
- 1956 John T. Tate
- 1962 Kenkichi Iwasawa, Bernard M. Dwork
- 1967 James B. Ax, Simon B. Kochen
- 1972 Wolfgang M. Schmidt
- 1977 Goro Shimura
- 1982 Robert P. Langlands, Barry Mazur
- 1987 Dorian M. Goldfeld, Benedict H. Gross, Don B. Zagier
- 1992 Karl Rubin, Paul Vojta
- 1997 Andrew J. Wiles
- 2002 Henryk Iwaniec, Richard Taylor
- 2005 Peter Sarnak
For full citations, see external links.