Maria Chudnovsky | |
Birth Date: | 6 January 1977 |
Birth Place: | Leningrad, Soviet Union[1] |
Thesis Title: | Berge Trigraphs and Their Applications. |
Thesis Year: | 2005 |
Thesis Url: | https://www.proquest.com/openview/069f53a4a158e682a94214e44f5657f4 |
Known For: | Graph theory, Combinatorial optimization |
Nationality: | Israeli-American |
Field: | Mathematics |
Work Institution: | Princeton University |
Alma Mater: | Technion Princeton University |
Maria Chudnovsky (born January 6, 1977) is an Israeli-American mathematician working on graph theory and combinatorial optimization.[2] She is a 2012 MacArthur Fellow.[3]
Chudnovsky is a professor in the department of mathematics at Princeton University. She grew up in Russia (attended Saint Petersburg Lyceum 30) and Israel, studying at the Technion, and received her Ph.D. in 2003 from Princeton University under the supervision of Paul Seymour. After postdoctoral research at the Clay Mathematics Institute,[4] she became an assistant professor at Princeton University in 2005, and moved to Columbia University in 2006. By 2014, she was the Liu Family Professor of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research at Columbia. She returned to Princeton as a professor of mathematics in 2015.[2]
Chudnovsky is an editor for a number of mathematical journals, including Combinatorica, Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B, Journal of Graph Theory and Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society.
Chudnovsky's contributions to graph theory include the proof of the strong perfect graph theorem (with Neil Robertson, Paul Seymour, and Robin Thomas) characterizing perfect graphs as being exactly the graphs with no odd induced cycles of length at least 5 or their complements.[5] [6] Other research contributions of Chudnovsky include co-authorship of the first polynomial-time algorithm for recognizing perfect graphs (time bounded by a polynomial of degree 9), a structural characterization of the claw-free graphs, and progress on the Erdős–Hajnal conjecture.[7]
In 2004 Chudnovsky was named one of the "Brilliant 10" by Popular Science magazine. Her work on the strong perfect graph theorem won for her and her co-authors the 2009 Fulkerson Prize.[8] In 2012 she was awarded a "genius award" under the MacArthur Fellows Program.[9] She was elected as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in the 2024 class of fellows.
In 2011, she married Daniel Panner, a viola player who teaches at Mannes School of Music and Rutgers University. They have a son named Rafael.[10]