Jump to content

Nina Snaith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kj cheetham (talk | contribs) at 15:43, 10 June 2020 (Minor formatting). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Nina Claire Snaith is a British mathematician at the University of Bristol working in random matrix theory and quantum chaos.

In 1998, she and her then adviser Jonathan Keating conjectured a value for the leading coefficient of the asymptotics of the moments of the Riemann zeta function. Keating and Snaith's guessed value for the constant was based on random-matrix theory, following a trend that started with Montgomery's pair correlation conjecture. Keating's and Snaith's work extended works[1] by Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek, also conjectural, based on number theoretic heuristics; Conrey, Farmer, Keating, Rubinstein, and Snaith later conjectured the lower terms in the asymptotics of the moments. Snaith's work appeared in her doctoral thesis Random Matrix Theory and zeta functions.[2]

Nina Snaith is the sister of mathematician and musician Dan Snaith.

Awards and honours

In 2008, she was awarded the London Mathematical Society's Whitehead Prize.

In 2014 Snaith delivered the 2014 Hanna Neuman Lecture [3] to honour the achievements of women in mathematics.

References

  1. ^ "No Title".
  2. ^ Nina Claire Snaith, Mathematical Genealogy Project
  3. ^ "Hanna Neumann Lecture r".