The Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation in collaboration with the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences have decided to strengthen Swedish research in Mathematics. The aim is for Sweden to regain a position at the international cutting edge. Approximately SEK 200 million will be made available over a six-year period.
Sweden has a longstanding tradition of fostering internationally prominent mathematicians, with many students wanting to undertake doctoral studies in the field. There is also a great demand for mathematicians with research training. Nevertheless, Swedish mathematical research has been losing ground internationally during past decades.
By establishing a research programme offering international experience to the best young researchers in Sweden, and enabling recruitment of young as well as more experienced mathematicians to Sweden, the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation aims to strengthen research in Mathematics.
– Excellence in mathematical research and a supply of leading mathematicians is of great importance for many innovations. Furthermore, the supply of prominent mathematicians is often crucial for other fields of research, particularly in the life sciences. It is therefore incredibly important, to Swedish research and business development alike, that Sweden can maintain and build upon its proud tradition in this field, says Peter Wallenberg Jr., Chairman of the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation.
The programme provides SEK 160 million in funding, enabling 24 Swedish post-docs to go abroad, and 35 post-docs and 25 visiting professors to be recruited internationally to Swedish institutions. Additionally, SEK 40 million will be given to support the Royal Academy's Institut Mittag-Leffler, one of the top-ten Mathematics research institutes in the world.
The program is a collaboration with the Royal Swedish Academy of sciences which reviews and ranks all nominated candidates.
In 2014 the first 15 grantees were selected; today another 17 are announced.
Five established researchers from abroad will become visiting professors at Swedish universities:
Professor Michael Jakobson, University of Maryland (Uppsala University)
Calculating the Probability of Chaos
Professor Mattias Jonsson, University of Michigan (Chalmers University of Technology and University of Gothenburg)
Abstract Methods in Mathematical Physics
Professor Michael Lacey, Georgia Institute of Technology (Lund University)
New Methods Solve Old Problems
Professor Eero Saksman, University of Helsinki (Lund University)
New Mathematics with Old Roots
Professor Michael Siegel, New Jersey Institute of Technology (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)
Microscopic Water Droplets in Oil
Six established researchers will receive funding for a post-doctoral position in Sweden open to researchers from abroad:
Professor Bo Berndtsson, Chalmers University of Technology and University of Gothenburg
Convexity in an Abstract Setting
Professor Mattias Dahl, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
A Close Look at the Theory of Relativity
Dr. Martin Herschend, Uppsala University
Higher Dimensional Representation Theory
Dr. Klas Modin, Chalmers University of Technology and University of Gothenburg
Mathematicians Look at the Human Body
Professor Hjalmar Rosengren, Chalmers University of Technology and University of Gothenburg
Mathematical Background of New Theories in Physics
Professor Henrik Shahgholian, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Macro Perspective on Microscopic Structures
Six researchers holding Swedish doctorates will be recruited to post-doctoral positions at universities abroad and will receive support for two years upon returning to Sweden.
Dr. Magnus Goffeng, University of Gothenburg (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Geometry of Objects with Many Vertices
Dr. Lukáš Malý, Linköping University (University of Cincinnati, USA)
Differential Equations and Various Notions of Derivative
Dr. Oscar Marmon, Chalmers University of Technology (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Counting Solutions of Diophantine Equations
Dr. Anna Sakovich, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (University of Vienna, Austria)
Mathematics of General Relativity and Black Holes
Dr. Martin Strömqvist, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
Understanding Microscopic Variations in Materials
Dr. Björn Winckler, KTH Royal Institute of Technology (State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA)
Studying the Essence of Chaos
Information about future calls for application
Contact
Staffan Normark, Permanent Secretary, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences,
+46 8 673 95 02, staffan.normark@kva.se
Göran Sandberg, Executive Director, Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation,
+46 8 545 017 80, kaw@kaw.se
Jessica Balksjö Nannini, Press Officer, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences,
+46 70 673 96 50, jessica.balksjo@kva.se