The Eugene Catalan Prize (Prix Eugène-Catalan) is awarded every five years by the Royal Academies for Science and the Arts of Belgium to recognize a scholar who has made important progress in pure mathematics. The prize, created in honor of the mathematician Eugène Charles Catalan, was first given in 1969; the original criteria specified Belgian or French scholars but European Union citizens are now eligible.[1]
Recipients
The recipients of the Eugene Catalan Prize are[1][2]:
2015: Pierre Bieliavsky
2010: Pierre-Emmanuel Caprace
2005: Didier Smets
2000: Jean-Michel Coron
1995: Jean-Pierre Tignol
1990: Haïm Brezis
1979: Roger Apéry
1974: J. Goffar-Lombet
1969: Gilbert Crombez
See also
List of mathematics awards
References
"Prix Eugène-Catalan", Wikipédia (in French), 2018-03-21, retrieved 2019-05-14
Recognizing excellence in the mathematical sciences : an international compilation of awards, prizes, and recipients. Jaguszewski, Janice M. Greenwich, Conn.: JAI Press. 1997. ISBN 0762302356. OCLC 37513025.
Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Graduate Studies in Mathematics
Hellenica World - Scientific Library
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