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Ailsa Keating
Born
Ailsa Macgregor Keating
Alma mater Clare College, Cambridge
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Awards Berwick Prize
Scientific career
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Columbia University
Institute for Advanced Study
University of Cambridge
Thesis Symplectic properties of Milnor fibres (2014)
Doctoral advisor Paul Seidel

Ailsa Macgregor Keating is a brilliant mathematician. She studies special kinds of shapes and spaces using advanced math. This field is called symplectic geometry. She also works on homological mirror symmetry, which connects different areas of math. She is a professor at the University of Cambridge, a famous university in England.

Her Journey in Mathematics

Ailsa Keating grew up in Toulouse, France. She loved math from a young age.

She studied mathematics at Clare College, Cambridge from 2005 to 2009. There, she earned a master's degree. After that, she continued her studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States.

In 2014, she finished her advanced degree at MIT. Her main project was about Symplectic properties of Milnor fibres. Her teacher, Paul Seidel, helped her with this work.

She then returned to Cambridge in 2014. She became a Junior Research Fellow at Trinity College. At the same time, she did more research at Columbia University and the Institute for Advanced Study. She became a teacher at Cambridge in 2017. In 2023, she was promoted to a full professor.

Awards and Recognition

Ailsa Keating has received important awards for her math work. In 2021, she won the Berwick Prize. This award is given by the London Mathematical Society.

She won the prize for her research on Dehn twists. These are special ways to twist shapes in math. She used them to study the symmetries of symplectic manifolds. These are complex mathematical spaces. Her work helps us understand these shapes better.

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