Mathematician wins prizes more important than Nobel for the great work

A mathematician who chose a group of serious equations who behave so badly that they make no sense has won the highest award at the academy. Martin Hairer, an Austrian-Britian researcher from London's Imperial College, is the winner of the Breakthrvard 2020 Math Prize, and will receive $3m. This award is rivaling [...]
Martin Hairer, an Austrian-Britian researcher from London's Imperial College, is the winner of the Breakthrvard 2020 Math Prize, and will receive $3m. This award is rivaling the Nobels as far as it comes from its reputation.
Heirer received the award for his work in the analysis of ostracastics (tochastic), a field that describes how common effects turn maths like mixing a cup of tea, increasing forest fires, or distributing water points that fall on a headscarf into complex problems.
His great work, a 180-face treaty, which announced the world with <x0 regulatory structures”, so amazed his colleagues that one had said it had been transmitted to Hair from some alien intelligent civilization, reports The Guardian, translates Periscopi.
Howard, who is a tenant in London with his wife and a colleague, heard that he had won the prize on a call to Skype while he was still in quarantine.
The “was totally unexpected,” he said. “I didn't think about it at all, so I was shocked. We couldn't even get out six, so we celebrated at home.” /Periscope











