All SIAM Fellows
 

SIAM Fellows

SIAM Fellows Program. Honor SIAM members who are recognized by their peers as distinguished for their contributions to the discipline. Help make outstanding SIAM members more competitive for awards and honors when they are being compared with colleagues from other disciplines.

SIAM Fellows


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Clarence Eugene Wayne | Boston University (2015)

For contributions to the theory of dynamical systems and partial differential equations.

J. A.C. Weideman | Stellenbosch University (2017)

For powerful and elegant numerical algorithms derived from complex analysis.

Michael I. Weinstein | Columbia University (2010)

For contributions to the analysis and applications of nonlinear waves.

Burton Wendroff | Los Alamos National Laboratory (2009)

For contributions to the numerical solution of partial differential equations.

John S. Wettlaufer | Yale University and Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics (2023)

For fundamental contributions to the modeling of interfacial problems, the study of ice, geophysics, and climate dynamics.

Mary F. Wheeler | University of Texas at Austin (2009)

For contributions to modeling and computational simulation in the geosciences.

Nathaniel Whitaker | University of Massachusetts (2024)

For significant achievements in broadening participation in mathematics and important contributions to multiple fields in applied mathematics, especially fluid mechanics.

Olof B. Widlund | Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University (2010)

For contributions to the theory of domain decomposition methods.

Karen E. Willcox | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2018)

For contributions to model reduction and multifidelity methods, with applications in optimization, control, design, and uncertainty quantification of large-scale systems.

Jan C. Willems | K.U. Leuven (2012)

For development of conceptual and physical aspects of modeling dynamical systems.

Rebecca M. Willett | University of Chicago (2021)

For contributions to mathematical foundations of machine learning, large-scale data science, and computational imaging.

Forman A. Williams | University of California, San Diego (2009)

For contributions to the understanding of combustion processes.

Ruth J. Williams | University of California San Diego (2020)

For contributions to the study of stochastic processes and their applications.

David P. Williamson | Cornell University (2016)

For fundamental contributions to the design and analysis of approximation algorithms.

Walter Willinger | AT&T Labs - Research (2009)

For the study of network traffic and the internet.

Shmuel Winograd | IBM Corporation (2009)

For scientific leadership and contributions to fast algorithms in computer science.

Barbara Wohlmuth | Technische Universität München (2020)

For sustained seminal contributions to the field of numerical mathematics and for exemplary leadership and service to the computational science community.

Henry Wolkowicz | University of Waterloo (2015)

For contributions to convex optimization and matrix theory.

Carol S. Woodward | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (2017)

For the development and application of numerical algorithms and software for large-scale simulations of complex physical phenomena.

Margaret H. Wright | Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University (2009)

For contributions to numerical optimization and service to the profession.

Stephen J. Wright | University of Wisconsin Madison (2011)

For contributions to the theory and computational aspects of linear and nonlinear optimization.

Andreas Wächter | Northwestern University (2021)

For fundamental contributions to nonlinear optimization, including algorithm design, theory, and software.

Jack Xin | University of California, Irvine (2021)

For pioneering work on traveling waves in periodic and random media and applications ranging from signal processing to finance.

Dongbin Xiu | The Ohio State University (2023)

For pioneering fundamental contributions to the mathematics and applications of uncertainty quantification, and for exceptional service in organizing many workshops.

Jinchao Xu | Pennsylvania State University (2011)

For contributions to the theory and applications of multilevel and adaptive numerical methods.

Chao Yang | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (2024)

For contributions in the development of novel algorithms and software for eigenvalue problems, and applications of algorithms and software to solve challenging scientific problems.

Ulrike Meier Yang | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (2024)

For pioneering work on parallel algebraic multigrid and software, and broad impact on high-performance computing.

Gang George Yin | Wayne State University (2015)

For contributions to stochastic systems theory, modeling, computational methods, and applications.

Lexing Ying | Stanford University (2024)

For contributions in numerical analysis and scientific computing.

James A. Yorke | University of Maryland, College Park (2013)

For contributions to the understanding and application of chaotic dynamics.

Laurent Younes | Johns Hopkins University (2023)

For fundamental contributions to the theory and computation of shape space in image analysis.

Ya-xiang Yuan | Chinese Academy of Sciences (2011)

For contributions to nonlinear optimization and leadership of computational mathematics in China.

Thaleia Zariphopoulou | University of Oxford and The University of Texas at Austin (2012)

For contributions to stochastic control and financial mathematics.

Yin Zhang | Rice University and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen (2019)

For pioneering and current algorithmic and theoretical contributions in the areas of linear and nonlinear optimization and remote sensing.

Pingwen Zhang | Peking University (2020)

For contributions in complex fluids modeling, multiscale analysis, and adaptive grid computation.

Yongjie Jessica Zhang | Carnegie Mellon University (2023)

For pioneering contributions to computational geometry, volumetric parameterization, isogeometric analysis, mesh generation, image processing, and simulation-based engineering applications.

Hongkai Zhao | Duke University (2022)

For seminal contributions to scientific computation, numerical analysis, and applications in science and engineering.

Xunyu Zhou | Columbia University and University of Oxford (2016)

For accomplishments in stochastic optimization, financial mathematics, and behavioral finance.

Jun Zou | Chinese University of Hong Kong (2019)

For contributions to numerical methods and analyses of direct and inverse problems of partial differential equations.

Kevin Zumbrun | Indiana University (2017)

For his contributions in traveling wave stability and his exceptional mentoring of graduate students and post-doctoral researchers.

Pauline van den Driessche | University of Victoria (2013)

For contributions to linear algebra and mathematical biology.

*Deceased


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