Alan Edelman

Alan Edelman
Born June 1963
Brooklyn, New York
Nationality American
Fields Mathematics
Computer Science
Institutions MIT
Alma mater MIT, Yale University
Thesis Eigenvalues and Condition Numbers of Random Matrices (1989)
Doctoral advisor Lloyd N. Trefethen[1]
Doctoral students Ross Lippert
Ioana Dumitriu
Brian Sutton
Raj Nadakuditi
Known for
Notable awards
Website
math.mit.edu/~edelman/

Alan Stuart Edelman (born June 1963) is an American mathematician and computer scientist. He is a Professor of Applied Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Principal Investigator at the MIT Computer Science and AI Laboratory (CSAIL) where he leads a group in Applied Computing. In 2004 Professor Edelman founded Interactive Supercomputing, recently acquired by Microsoft.

Education

An alumnus of Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics, Edelman received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in mathematics from Yale University in 1984, and the Ph.D. in applied mathematics from MIT in 1989 under the direction of Lloyd N. Trefethen. Following a year at Thinking Machines Corp and at CERFACS in France, Edelman went to U.C. Berkeley as a Morrey Assistant Professor and Levy Fellow, 1990-93. He joined the MIT faculty in applied mathematics in 1993.

Research

Edelman's research interests include high-performance computing, numerical computation, linear algebra, and stochastic eigenanalysis (random matrix theory).

Awards

A Sloan fellow, Edelman received an NSF Faculty Career award in 1995. He has received numerous awards, among them the Gordon Bell Prize and Householder Prize (1990), the Chauvenet Prize (1998),[7] the Edgerly Science Partnership Award (1999), the SIAM Activity Group on Linear Algebra Prize (2000), and the Lester R. Ford Award,[8] (2005, with Gilbert Strang). In 2011, Edelman was selected a Fellow of SIAM,[9] "for his contributions in bringing together mathematics and industry in the areas of numerical linear algebra, random matrix theory, and parallel computing." In 2015, he became a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society [10] "for contributions to random matrix theory, numerical linear algebra, high-performance algorithms, and applications."

References

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