Jim Geelen is a professor at the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization in the faculty of mathematics at the University of Waterloo, where he holds the Canada Research Chair in Combinatorial optimization.[1] He is known for his work on Matroid theory and the extension of the Graph Minors Project to representable matroids. In 2003, he won the Fulkerson Prize with his co-authors A. M. H. Gerards, and A. Kapoor for their research on Rota's excluded minors conjecture.[2][3] In 2006, he won the Coxeter–James Prize presented by the Canadian Mathematical Society.[4]

Jim Geelen
Alma materUniversity of Waterloo
AwardsFulkerson Prize
Scientific career
FieldsCombinatorial optimization
InstitutionsUniversity of Waterloo
Doctoral advisorWilliam H. Cunningham

He received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1992 from Curtin University in Australia, and obtained his Ph.D. in 1996 at the University of Waterloo under the supervision of William Cunningham.[5] After brief postdoctoral fellowships in the Netherlands, Germany, and Japan, he returned to the University of Waterloo in 1997.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ Jim Geelen at the Canada Research Chairs website.
  2. ^ 2003 Fulkerson Prize citation, retrieved 2012-08-18.
  3. ^ Geelen, J. F.; Gerards, A. M. H.; Kapoor, A. (2000), "The Excluded Minors for GF(4)-Representable Matroids", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 79 (2): 247–299, doi:10.1006/jctb.2000.1963
  4. ^ Winners of the Coxeter–James Prize.
  5. ^ Jim Geelen at the Mathematics Genealogy Project.
  6. ^ "2006 Coxeter James Prize" (PDF).