Martin Hairer
Sir Martin Hairer is an Austrian-British mathematician working in the field of stochastic analysis, in particular stochastic partial differential equations. He is Professor of Mathematics at EPFL and at Imperial College London. He previously held appointments at the University of Warwick and the Courant Institute of New York University. In 2014 he was awarded the Fields Medal, one of the highest honours a mathematician can achieve. In 2020 he won the 2021 Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics.
Early life and education
Hairer was born in Geneva, Switzerland. He attended the Collège Claparède Geneva where he received his high school diploma in 1994. He entered a school science competition with sound editing software that was developed into Amadeus,and later continued to maintain the software in addition to his academic work; it continued to be widely used as of 2020. He then attended the University of Geneva, where he obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics in July 1998, Master of Science in Physics in October 1998 and PhD in Physics under the supervision of Jean-Pierre Eckmann in November 2001.
Research and career
Hairer is active in the field of stochastic partial differential equations in particular, and in stochastic analysis and stochastic dynamics in general. He has worked on variants of Hörmander's theorem, systematisation of the construction of Lyapunov functions for stochastic systems, development of a general theory of ergodicity for non-Markovian systems, multiscale analysis techniques, theory of homogenisation, theory of path sampling and theory of rough paths and, in 2014, on his theory of regularity structures.Under the name HairerSoft, he develops Macintosh software.
Affiliations
- Regius Professor of Mathematics, University of Warwick
- Member of the scientific steering committee of ETHZ-ITS
- Institut Henri Poincaré, member of scientific steering committee
- Mathematical Research Institute of Oberwolfach, member of steering committee
- Editor, Probability Theory and Related Fields
- Editor, Nonlinear Differential Equations and Applications
- Editor, Annales Henri Poincaré Ser. B
- Editor, Electronic Journal of Probability
- Editor, Stochastic Partial Differential Equations: Analysis and Computations
- Visiting Professor, Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse
- Visiting Professor, Technische Universität Berlin
- Visiting Professor, École Normale Supérieure, Paris
- Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
- Lipschitz Lectures, Hausdorff Center for Mathematics, University of Bonn
- Minerva Lectures, Columbia University
- Euler Lecture, Zuse Institute Berlin
- Medallion Lecture, Institute of Mathematical Statistics
- Lévy Lecture, Conference on Stochastic Processes and their Applications
- Fields Medal lecture, International Congress of Mathematicians, Seoul
- Collingwood Lecture, Durham University
- Bernoulli Lecture, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
- Leonardo da Vinci Lecture, University of Milan
- Kai-Lai Chung Lecture, Stanford University
- Michalik Lecture, University of Pittsburgh
Awards and honours
- 2006–2011 Advanced Research Fellowship, Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
- 2007 – Editors' Choice Award, Macworld
- 2008 – Whitehead Prize, London Mathematical Society
- 2008 – Philip Leverhulme Prize, Leverhulme Trust
- 2009 – Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award
- 2012 – Leverhulme Research Leadership Award, Leverhulme Trust
- 2013 – Fermat Prize, Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse
- 2014 – Consolidator grant, European Research Council
- 2014 – Elected Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2014
- 2014 – Fröhlich Prize, London Mathematical Society
- 2014 – Fields Medal
- 2015 – Fellow of the American Mathematical Society
- 2015 – Member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences
- 2015 – Member of the Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
- 2015 – Member of the Academia Europaea
- 2016 – Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- 2017 – Foreign member of the Polish Academy of Sciences
- 2019 – Substantive Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- 2021 – Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics
- 2022 – King Faisal Prize
- 2022 – Medal of the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematics and Physics
- 2025 – Sylvester Medal of the Royal Society.