Cannabis

Kiran Kedlaya
BornJune 1974 (age 50)
United States[2]
Alma materMIT (Ph.D. 2000)
Princeton (M.A. 1997)
Harvard (B.A. 1996)
AwardsPresidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (2006)[1]
Fellow, American Mathematical Society (2012)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUCSD
MIT
Doctoral advisorAise Johan de Jong
Doctoral studentsJennifer Balakrishnan
Websitekskedlaya.org

Kiran Sridhara Kedlaya (/ˈkɪrən ˈʃrdər kɛdˈlɑːjə/ KIRR-ən SHREE-dər ked-LAH-yə;[3] born July 1974) is an Indian American mathematician. He currently is a Professor of Mathematics and the Stefan E. Warschawski Chair in Mathematics[4] at the University of California, San Diego.

Biography

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Kiran Kedlaya was born into a Tulu Brahmin family.[5] At age 16, Kedlaya won a gold medal at the International Mathematics Olympiad,[6] which he later followed with a silver and another gold medal. While an undergraduate student at Harvard, he was a three-time Putnam Fellow in 1993, 1994, and 1995.[7] A 1996 article by The Harvard Crimson described him as "the best college-age student in math in the United States".[8]

Kedlaya was runner-up for the 1995 Morgan Prize, for a paper[9] in which he substantially improved on results of László Babai and Vera Sós (1985)[10] on the size of the largest product-free subset of a finite group of order n.

He gave an invited talk at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2010, on the topic of "Number Theory".[11]

In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[12]

Game shows

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Kedlaya was a contestant on the game show Jeopardy! in 2011, winning one episode.[13]

Selected works

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References

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