Polish Mathematical Society
Formation | April 2, 1919 |
---|---|
Headquarters | ul. Śniadeckich 8, 00-956 Warszawa, Poland |
Location | |
Official language | Polish, English |
President | Jacek Miękisz |
Key people | Tomasz Downarowicz, Klaudiusz Wójcik, Krystyna Jaworska, Piotr Kowalczyk, Leokadia Białas-Cież, Małgorzata Makiewicz, Dorota Mozyrska, Jan Poleszczuk |
Website | http://www.ptm.org.pl/ |
The Polish Mathematical Society (Polish: Polskie Towarzystwo Matematyczne) is the main professional society of Polish mathematicians and represents Polish mathematics within the European Mathematical Society (EMS) and the International Mathematical Union (IMU).
History[edit]
The society was established in Kraków, Poland on 2 April 1919 . It was originally called the Mathematical Society in Kraków, the name was changed to the Polish Mathematical Society on 21 April 1920. It was founded by 16 mathematicians, Stanisław Zaremba, Franciszek Leja, Alfred Rosenblatt, Stefan Banach and Otto Nikodym were among them.[1]
Ever since its foundation, the society's main activity was to bring mathematicians together by means of organizing conferences and lectures. The second main activity is the publication of its annals Annales Societatis Mathematicae Polonae, consisting of:
- Series 1: Commentationes Mathematicae
- Series 2: Wiadomości Matematyczne ("Mathematical News"), in Polish
- Series 3: Mathematica Applicanda (formerly Matematyka Stosowana until 2012)
- Series 4: Fundamenta Informaticae
- Series 5: Didactica Mathematicae
- Series 6: Antiquitates Mathematicae
- Series 7: Delta, in Polish
The annals are also known under the Polish name Roczniki Polskiego Towarzystwa Matematycznego and under the English name Polish Mathematical Society Annals.
Stefan Banach Prize[edit]
The Polish Mathematical Society has awarded the Stefan Banach Prize to the following recipients:[2]
- 1946: Hugo Steinhaus and Wacław Sierpiński
- 1947: Mieczysław Biernacki
- 1948: Władysław Orlicz
- 1949: Stanisław Mazur
- 1950: Jan Mikusiński
- 1951: Adam Bielecki
- 1952: Andrzej Alexiewicz
- 1953: Stanisław Hartman
- 1954: Tadeusz Leżański
- 1955: Witold Wolibner
- 1956: Zofia Szmydt
- 1957: Andrzej Grzegorczyk
- 1958: Mieczysław Altman
- 1959: Józef Meder
- 1960: Krzysztof Maurin
- 1961: Czesław Bessaga and Aleksander Pełczyński
- 1962: Edward Sąsiada
- 1963: Bogdan Bojarski
- 1964: Zbigniew Ciesielski
- 1965: Jan Mycielski
- 1966: Włodzimierz Mlak
- 1967: Wiesław Żelazko
- 1968: Władysław Narkiewicz
- 1969: Danuta Przeworska-Rolewicz and Stefan Rolewicz
- 1970: Roman Duda
- 1971: Stanisław Kwapień
- 1972: Andrzej Pelczar
- 1973: Adam Henryk Toruńczyk
- 1974: Leszek Pacholski
- 1976: Tadeusz Figiel
- 1977: Lech Drewnowski
- 1979: Przemysław Wojtaszczyk
- 1982: Lech Maligranda
- 1983: Tomasz Byczkowski
- 1984: Marek Bożejko
- 1985: Wojciech Banaszczak
- 1986: Henryk Hudzik
- 1987: Jarosław Zemanek
- 1988: Adam Paszkiewicz
- 1990: Marek Lassak
- 1991: Paweł Domański
- 1992: Marek Nawrocki
- 1993: Ryszard Szwarc
- 1997: Mariusz Lemańczyk
- 2001: Mieczysław Mastyło
- 2002: Rafał Latała and Krzysztof Oleszkiewicz
- 2003: Jerzy Jezierski and Wacław Marzantowicz
- 2007: Grzegorz Świątek
- 2008: Lech Tadeusz Januszkiewicz
- 2009: Tomasz Downarowicz
- 2010: Adam Paszkiewicz
- 2011: Tomasz Komorowski
- 2012: Jacek Świątkowski
- 2013: Henryk Woźniakowski
- 2014: Krzysztof Frączek
- 2015: Jan Okniński
- 2016: Adrian Langer
- 2017: Krzysztof Bogdan
- 2018: Wojciech Kucharz and Maksym Radziwill
- 2019: Yuriy Tomilov
- 2020: Jerzy Weyman
- 2021: Damian Osajda
- 2022: Piotr W. Nowak
International Stefan Banach Prize[edit]
The International Stefan Banach Prize (Polish: Międzynarodowa Nagroda im. Stefana Banacha) is an annual award presented by the Mathematical Society to mathematicians for best doctoral dissertations in the mathematical sciences. Its aim is to "promote and financially support the most promising young researchers" in the field of mathematics. It was founded in 2009 and is named in honour of a renowned Polish mathematician Stefan Banach (1892-1945). The laureates of the award also receive a cash prize of zl 25,000 (c.$6,500). List of laureates:
- 2009: Tomasz Elsner
- 2010: Jakub Gismatullin
- 2011: Łukasz Pańkowski
- 2012: Andras Mathe
- 2013: Marcin Pilipczuk
- 2014: Dan Petersen
- 2015: Joonas Ilmavirta
- 2016: Adam Kanigowski
- 2017: Anna Szymusiak
Presidents of the Polish Mathematical Society[edit]
- Stanisław Zaremba (1919–1921, 1936-1937)
- Wiktor Staniewicz (1921-1923)
- Samuel Dickstein (1923-1926)
- Zdzisław Krygowski (1926-1928)
- Wacław Sierpiński (1928–1930)
- Kazimierz Bartel (1930-1932)
- Stefan Mazurkiewicz (1932-1936, 1937-1939)
- Stefan Banach (1939–1945)
- Karol Borsuk (1946)
- Kazimierz Kuratowski (1946-1953)
- Stefan Straszewicz (1953-1957)
- Edward Marczewski (1957-1959)
- Tadeusz Ważewski (1959-1961)
- Władysław Ślebodziński (1961-1963)
- Franciszek Leja (1963-1965)
- Roman Sikorski (1965-1977)
- Władysław Orlicz (1977-1979)
- Jacek Szarski (1979-1981)
- Zbigniew Ciesielski (1981-1983)
- Wiesław Żelazko (1983-1985)
- Stanisław Balcerzyk (1985-1987)
- Andrzej Pelczar (1987-1991)
- Julian Musielak (1991-1993)
- Kazimierz Goebel (1993-1999)
- Bolesław Szafirski (1999-2003)
- Zbigniew Palka (2003-2005)
- Stefan Jackowski (2005-2013)
- Wacław Marzantowicz (2014-2019)
- Jacek Miękisz (2020-present)[3]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ K.Ciesielski (2019). "The calendar of the first two years of PTM". Wiadomości Matematyczne vol.55, No.1, pp. 7-14. Polish Mathematcal Society. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
- ^ "Laureates of Stefan Banach Prize". Retrieved 2019-06-01.
- ^ "Władze Polskiego Towarzystwa Matematycznego". Retrieved 23 February 2020.
- Janusz Kowalski (December 2004). "Polish Mathematical Society (PTM)" (PDF). EMS. Retrieved April 10, 2006.
- Website of the journal Wiadomości Matematyczne, edited by the Polish Mathematical Society. Retrieved on January 9, 2009.
External links[edit]
- Polish Mathematical Society website (in Polish)
- "Polish Mathematical Society". Mathematical Societies, Medals, Prizes and other honours. Archived from the original on December 14, 2005. Retrieved June 26, 2005.