Sema Salur is a Turkish-American mathematician, currently serving as a Professor of Mathematics at the University of Rochester.[1] She was awarded the Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize for 2014–2015,[2] a prize intended to give a recently promoted associate professor a year-long fellowship at Cornell University;[3] and has been the recipient of a National Science Foundation Research Award beginning in 2017.[4] She specialises in the "geometry and topology of the moduli spaces of calibrated submanifolds inside Calabi–Yau, G2 and Spin(7) manifolds",[2][5] which are important to certain aspects of string theory and M-theory in physics, theories that attempt to unite gravity, electromagnetism, and the strong and weak nuclear forces into one coherent Theory of Everything.[5]
Education
- 1993: B.S. in Mathematics, Boğaziçi University, Turkey.[2]
- 2000: PhD in Mathematics, Michigan State University[2]
References
- ↑ "Sema Salur". University of Rochester.
- 1 2 3 4 "Ruth I. Michler Prize 2014-2015". Association for Women in Mathematics.
- ↑ "The Ruth I Michler Memorial Prize of the AWM". St Andrews University.
- ↑ "Award Abstract #1711178: Manifolds with Special Holonomy and Applications". National Science Foundation.
- 1 2 "Professor Sema Salur receives NSF Research Award". University of Rochester.