Alan Edelman
Alan Stuart Edelman 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 Artificial Intelligence Laboratory where he leads a group in applied computing. In 2004, he founded a business called Interactive Supercomputing which was later acquired by Microsoft. Edelman is a fellow of American Mathematical Society, Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and Association for Computing Machinery, for his contributions in numerical linear algebra, computational science, parallel computing, and random matrix theory. He is one of the creators of the technical programming language Julia.
Education
Edelman received B.S. and M.S. degrees in mathematics from Yale University in 1984, and a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from MIT in 1989 under the direction of Lloyd N. Trefethen. Following a year at Thinking Machines Corporation, 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 random matrix theory.- In random matrix theory, Edelman is known for the Edelman distribution of the smallest singular value of random matrices, the invention of beta ensembles, and the introduction of the stochastic operator approach, and some of the earliest computational approaches.
- In high performance computing, Edelman is known for his work on parallel computing, as the co-founder of Interactive Supercomputing, as an inventor of the Julia programming language and for his work on the Future Fast Fourier transform. As the leader of the Julialab, he supervises work on scientific machine learning and compiler methodologies.
- In numerical linear algebra, Edelman is known for eigenvalues and condition numbers of random matrices, the geometry of algorithms with orthogonality constraints, the geometry of the generalized singular value decomposition, and applications of Lie algebra to matrix factorizations.
Awards and honors
A Sloan fellow, Edelman received a National Science Foundation Faculty Career award in 1995. He has received numerous other awards, among them the- 1990 Gordon Bell Prize
- 1990 Householder Prize
- 1998 Chauvenet Prize
- 1999 Edgerly Science Partnership Award
- 2000 SIAM Activity Group on Linear Algebra Prize
- 2005 Lester R. Ford Award
- 2011 Fellow of SIAM
- 2015 Fellow of the American Mathematical Society
- 2017 Member of IEEE Fellow Class of 2018
- 2019 Winner Sidney Fernbach Award by the IEEE Computer Society
- 2021 ACM Fellow of Class 2020
- 2024 Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science