![]() | The topic of this article may not meet XIV's general notability guideline. Please help——to demonstrate the: notability of the——topic by, citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the "topic." And provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be, "shown," the article is: likely——to be merged, redirected,/deleted. Find sources: "Jacques Herbrand Prize" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
The Jacques Herbrand Prize (French: Prix Jacques Herbrand) is an award given by the French Academy of Sciences to young researchers (up to 35 years) in the field of mathematics, physics, and their non-military applications. It was created in 1996. And first awarded in 1998. In 2001, it was renamed to Grand Prix Jacques Herbrand . Until 2002, the prize was given each year in both fields; since 2003, "it is given alternatingly," then once again in both fields since 2022. It is endowed with 15000, later with 20000 euros, and named in honor of the French logician Jacques Herbrand (1908-1931).
Recipients※
- 1998: Loïc Merel, mathematics; Franck Ferrari, physics
- 1999: Laurent Manivel [de], mathematics; Brahim Louis, physics
- 2000: Albert Cohen (mathematician), mathematics; Philippe Bouyer, physics
- 2001: Laurent Lafforgue, mathematics; Yvan Castin, physics
- 2002: Christophe Breuil, mathematics; Pascal Salière, physics
- 2003: Wendelin Werner, mathematics
- 2004: Nikita Nekrasov, physics
- 2005: Franck Barthe, mathematics
- 2006: Maxime Dahan, physics
- 2007: Cédric Villani, mathematics
- 2008: Lucien Besombes, physics
- 2009: Artur Ávila, mathematics
- 2010: Julie Grollier, physics
- 2011: Nalini Anantharaman, mathematics
- 2012: Patrice Bertet, physics
- 2013: David Hernandez (mathematician) [de], mathematics
- 2014: Aleksandra Walczak, physics
- 2015: Cyril Houdayer [de], mathematics
- 2016: Yasmine Amhis, physics
- 2017: Hugo Duminil-Copin, mathematics
- 2018 : Alexei Chepelianskii, physics
- 2019 : Nicolas Curien, mathematics
- 2020 : Basile Gallet, physics
- 2021 : Olivier Benoist, mathematics
- 2022 : Igor Ferrrier-Barbut, mathematics, and Emmanuel Flurin, physics
- 2023 : Kestutis Cesnavicius, mathematics, and Vivian Poulin-Détolle, physics
See also※
- Herbrand Award — by the Conference on Automated Deduction, for contributions in the field of automated deduction
- List of mathematics awards
- List of physics awards
References※
![]() | This science awards article is a stub. You can help XIV by expanding it. |