Irena Peeva Explained
Irena Vassileva Peeva is a professor of mathematics at Cornell University, specializing in commutative algebra.[1] She disproved the Eisenbud–Goto regularity conjecture jointly with Jason McCullough.[2]
Education and career
Peeva did her graduate studies at Brandeis University, earning a Ph.D. in 1995 under the supervision of David Eisenbud with a thesis entitled Free Resolutions. She was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California, Berkeley and a C. L. E. Moore instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technologybefore joining the Cornell Department of Mathematics faculty in 1998.[3]
Peeva is an editor of the Transactions of AMS.[4]
Books
Peeva is the author of:
- Graded Syzygies (Springer, 2011).[5]
- Minimal Free Resolutions over Complete Intersections (with David Eisenbud, Springer, 2016).[6]
Recognition
In 2014 Peeva was elected as a fellow of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to commutative algebra and its applications."[7]
In 2019/2020 and in 2012/2013 Peeva was a Simons Foundation Fellow.[8] During 1999-2001 she was a Sloan Foundation Fellow[9] and was a Sloan Doctoral Dissertation Fellow in 1994/1995.
External links
Notes and References
- https://math.cornell.edu/irena-peeva Faculty profile
- McCullough . Jason . Peeva . Irena . 10.1090/jams/891 . 2 . Journal of the American Mathematical Society . 3758150 . 473–496 . Counterexamples to the Eisenbud–Goto regularity conjecture . 31 . 2018. free .
- http://pi.math.cornell.edu/~irena/papers/cv.pdf Curriculum vitae
- Web site: Bio.
- Reviews of Graded Syzygies: Christopher A. Francisco (2011), ; Peter Schenzel,
- Reviews of Minimal Free Resolutions over Complete Intersections: Benjamin P. Richert, ; Michael Brown,
- https://www.ams.org/profession/ams-fellows/new-fellows 2014 Class of the Fellows of the AMS
- Web site: Simons Fellows in Mathematics. 2012-06-19. Simons Foundation. en-US. 2019-10-06.
- Web site: Past Fellows. sloan.org. 2019-10-06. 2018-03-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20180314000756/https://sloan.org/past-fellows. dead.