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Tim Austin (mathematician)

Timothy Derek Austin is a British mathematician known for his work in ergodic theory, probability, and related areas of analysis. He is currently the Regius Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick, a position to which he was appointed in 2023.[1]

Education

Austin received his B.A. in mathematics from Trinity College, University of Cambridge in 2005. He then completed the Certificate of Advanced Study in Mathematics (Part III of the Mathematical Tripos) at Trinity College in 2006, with distinction. He earned his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2010 under the supervision of Terence Tao. His dissertation was entitled Multiple recurrence and the structure of probability-preserving systems.[2][3]

Career

From 2010 to 2012, Austin was a visiting academic at Brown University while holding a Clay Research Fellowship (2010–2015). He then joined the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University, first as an assistant professor (2012–2014) and later as an associate professor (2015–2017). He moved to UCLA as an associate professor in 2017, becoming a full professor in 2019. In the same year he published his proof of a weak Poincaré conjecture, which had remained unsolved since the 1970s.[4] In 2023, he was appointed Regius Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick.

He has also held visiting research positions at Microsoft Research (Redmond and New England).

Research

Austin works in ergodic theory, harmonic analysis, additive combinatorics, metric geometry, high-dimensional probability, and rigorous statistical mechanics.

Awards and honors

References

  1. ^ "Professor Tim Austin named Regius Professor of Mathematics". University of Warwick. 1 July 2023. Retrieved 14 September 2025.
  2. ^ MR 2667569
  3. ^ Tim Austin at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ Hartnett, Kevin (27 March 2019). "Proof Finds That All Change Is a Mix of Order and Randomness". Quanta Magazine.
  5. ^ "Clay Research Fellows". Clay Mathematics Institute. Retrieved 14 September 2025.
  6. ^ "Breakthrough Prize 2020". Breakthrough Prize. Retrieved 14 September 2025.
  7. ^ "Michael Brin Prize in Dynamical Systems". Retrieved 14 September 2025.
  8. ^ "Ostrowski Prize laureates". Retrieved 14 September 2025.
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