Berliner Boersenzeitung - Duminil-Copin, Fields-winning mathematician with 'aesthetic vision'

EUR -
AED 4.249064
AFN 72.29654
ALL 96.165114
AMD 436.427557
ANG 2.07037
AOA 1060.790054
ARS 1614.279735
AUD 1.619495
AWG 2.085141
AZN 1.986919
BAM 1.950918
BBD 2.317301
BDT 141.658773
BGN 1.906005
BHD 0.436725
BIF 3440.338569
BMD 1.156805
BND 1.472734
BOB 7.985981
BRL 5.975593
BSD 1.156606
BTN 106.449158
BWP 15.506197
BYN 3.4144
BYR 22673.381286
BZD 2.318927
CAD 1.571925
CDF 2519.52159
CHF 0.902187
CLF 0.026309
CLP 1038.834125
CNY 7.942914
CNH 7.955801
COP 4286.229211
CRC 544.936331
CUC 1.156805
CUP 30.655337
CVE 110.619489
CZK 24.395901
DJF 205.58782
DKK 7.472001
DOP 70.564528
DZD 152.103634
EGP 60.010309
ERN 17.352078
ETB 180.920502
FJD 2.545312
FKP 0.859581
GBP 0.862878
GEL 3.140765
GGP 0.859581
GHS 12.533996
GIP 0.859581
GMD 85.027593
GNF 10150.965802
GTQ 8.867885
GYD 242.322556
HKD 9.052984
HNL 30.73633
HRK 7.533346
HTG 151.76023
HUF 386.986615
IDR 19541.909697
ILS 3.596797
IMP 0.859581
INR 106.686183
IQD 1515.41477
IRR 1529036.150107
ISK 144.797632
JEP 0.859581
JMD 181.166642
JOD 0.820195
JPY 183.82039
KES 149.459299
KGS 101.162273
KHR 4650.356652
KMF 492.798757
KPW 1041.164324
KRW 1711.215915
KWD 0.355012
KYD 0.963817
KZT 567.965956
LAK 24796.119021
LBP 104008.042153
LKR 359.563121
LRD 212.040004
LSL 18.740809
LTL 3.415745
LVL 0.69974
LYD 7.351453
MAD 10.833429
MDL 19.945003
MGA 4823.87726
MKD 61.600396
MMK 2428.638734
MNT 4142.414572
MOP 9.324127
MRU 46.410504
MUR 53.108874
MVR 17.872866
MWK 2009.370284
MXN 20.47607
MYR 4.530014
MZN 73.931944
NAD 18.735339
NGN 1614.03208
NIO 42.477763
NOK 11.16671
NPR 170.319785
NZD 1.957005
OMR 0.444795
PAB 1.156621
PEN 3.954537
PGK 4.97513
PHP 68.60199
PKR 323.320435
PLN 4.253613
PYG 7496.241127
QAR 4.212042
RON 5.090528
RSD 117.420344
RUB 91.655436
RWF 1687.77874
SAR 4.34063
SBD 9.306709
SCR 17.214324
SDG 695.239717
SEK 10.677103
SGD 1.47418
SHP 0.867903
SLE 28.457309
SLL 24257.625212
SOS 661.114251
SRD 43.349537
STD 23943.53139
STN 24.871311
SVC 10.119589
SYP 128.696054
SZL 19.064104
THB 36.84482
TJS 11.085858
TMT 4.048818
TND 3.382209
TOP 2.78531
TRY 51.002094
TTD 7.848461
TWD 36.711797
TZS 3007.693652
UAH 50.986048
UGX 4273.306319
USD 1.156805
UYU 46.523377
UZS 14060.966989
VES 506.284157
VND 30366.135651
VUV 138.146824
WST 3.158941
XAF 654.32807
XAG 0.013522
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.126324
XCG 2.084538
XDR 0.81164
XOF 650.706536
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.012582
ZAR 19.092763
ZMK 10412.654242
ZMW 22.495997
ZWL 372.490792
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -1.7300

    193.26

    -0.9%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    55.15

    -0.31%

  • RIO

    0.4050

    92.085

    +0.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.27

    +0.09%

  • NGG

    -0.1500

    89.7

    -0.17%

  • BP

    1.6150

    41.555

    +3.89%

  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    17.68

    +4.41%

  • BCE

    -0.5000

    25.89

    -1.93%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    23.19

    +0.47%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    59.17

    -0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.4400

    34.75

    -1.27%

  • BCC

    -0.6670

    71.873

    -0.93%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.88

    +1.86%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.4

    -0.42%

Duminil-Copin, Fields-winning mathematician with 'aesthetic vision'
Duminil-Copin, Fields-winning mathematician with 'aesthetic vision' / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Duminil-Copin, Fields-winning mathematician with 'aesthetic vision'

Hugo Duminil-Copin, a French mathematician whose visual approach helped him win the world's most prestigious mathematics prize the Fields Medal on Tuesday, said he "doesn't really fit into the cliches of a genius".

Text size:

The 36-year-old, who has a messy head of hair and bright eyes beaming from behind glasses, told AFP that he is a "very, very normal person" who loves sport, his family and quiet moments of reflection.

But for Duminil-Copin, who specialises in probability theory, those quiet moments can lead to discoveries that won him the Fields Medal, the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for mathematics.

He accepted the prize, which is awarded every four years to mathematicians under 40, at a ceremony in Finland's capital Helsinki.

The other winners were Britain's James Maynard of Oxford University, June Huh of Princeton in the United States and Ukraine's Maryna Viazovska, who is only the second ever woman laureate.

Duminil-Copin described with unabashed enthusiasm the happiness he finds in working with others in the search for answers -- whether or not they find one.

"It's the best, especially since it's a collective process, where all the beauty is in interacting with others," he said in an interview a few days before the prize was announced.

- A visual mind -

Born on August 26, 1985, Duminil-Copin has collected a raft of mathematics awards over the last decade.

At the age of 31, he was appointed professor at France's Institute of Advanced Scientific Studies in 2016.

"It's a place that seems made for me, for my creative part," he said of the green campus outside Paris.

It gives the mathematician that most precious resource for deep thinkers: time.

"This slowness in everyday life is very fruitful because I need time for ideas to come, for them to settle quietly, for them to take shape," he said.

At the campus, which is not far from where he grew up, Duminil-Copin uses his "very visual intuition" to take on the most complicated mathematical problems.

"There are very few formulas and many drawings" in his mind when he thinks about such problems, he said.

That "aesthetic vision" allows him to view mathematics with a "certain elegance", he added.

The Paris institute allows researchers to free themselves of all other obligations, including teaching.

But Duminil-Copin teaches anyway, retaining a professorship at the University of Geneva, saying that "in the end it is perhaps the most important aspect of this profession".

He may have inherited this passion from his father, a sports teacher, and mother, a dancer who became a teacher later in life.

When he was younger, Duminil-Copin envisioned becoming a teacher himself -- of maths, of course -- but his talent propelled him towards research.

Collaboration is at the heart of his outlook. If he provides mathematical tools to physicists, their work in turn may allow someone else in the future to find new applications for them.

"It's the whole community that really produces scientific progress," he said.

- Mental balance -

Duminil-Copin hailed the importance of two university professors to his career, Jean-Francois Le Gall, who also worked on probability theory, and fellow Fields Medal winner Wendelin Werner.

He said he fell in "love at first sight" with percolation theory during a class Werner taught on the subject, which falls under the branch of statistical physics.

It was in that class that Duminil-Copin first encountered Nienhuis's conjecture -- a "beautiful, elegant and completely mysterious" problem, he said.

"I solved it a few years later, almost without doing it on purpose."

As a child, Duminil-Copin preferred astronomy to mathematics.

He said he was "not pushed at all" by his parents to focus solely on his studies -- instead they were keen to "confront him with a variety of things" such as sport, music and friends.

The lesson seems to have stuck.

"When we talk about preparing to become a researcher we think of intelligence, academic training, but there is also a mental balance which is very important," he said.

New ideas can strike him "anytime, in the middle of the night or in the shower", he said.

But they will have to wait until he's back at work.

"My priority is on the personal side, to spend time with my daughter and my wife."

(K.Müller--BBZ)