Mathematics Links

This page (created by Kiran Kedlaya) is meant to provide links of use to undergraduate and graduate students, and to professional mathematicians. I maintain a separate links page for the American Mathematics Competitions, focused on precollege students and their parents and teachers. Perhaps even more useful in this regard is the set of lists maintained by Art of Problem Solving, which also includes some book recommendations (click on "Resources").

This page used to live within my personal web site, but I decided to try setting it up as a wiki. Unfortunately, I had to limit edit access to credentialed users; if you want to make changes, email me with a proposed account name and I'll send you back a password.

Contents

[edit]

For undergraduate students

[edit]

For graduate students

See also "Funding sources" below.

[edit]

For recent PhDs

See also "Funding sources" below.

[edit]

Funding sources

These are mostly aimed at graduate students and older, since there are much better resources elsewhere aimed at undergraduates and younger. See also the AMS funding page. And beware that applications/nominations for a program starting in fall of a given year may be as due as early as July of the previous year!

Guide to terminology: "graduate" fellowships typically begin at the start of graduate students or a year later. "Postdoctoral" fellowships typically begin at receipt of the PhD. "Junior" fellowships are sometimes awarded to fresh PhDs in exceptional cases, but are targeted at those who have already completed a postdoc (and are now "junior faculty", i.e., tenure-track).

Not listed separately are VIGRE postdocs, which are funded through a special NSF program that makes grants to individual schools. Because of NSF rules, these are limited to US citizens and permanent residents. Also not listed separately are postdocs at research institutes; see below.

[edit]

Research institutes

These are sorted by full name (omitting first names in eponyms, except the "Max" in "Max Planck" by convention), but many of these are commonly known by acronyms, so these are included as well. See also the unified home page for all of the NSF-funded institutes.

In a couple of cases, these are not really single physical locations, but abstract entities (with money) that include several locations. These are characterized as "distributed".

Institutes that typically host and fund postdocs (often in accordance with a semester-long or year-long themed program) include: CRM (Montréal), Fields, IAS, IHES, IMA, MPI, MSRI, Newton, RIMS. Institutes that run primarily as conference centers (with few long-term visitors or faculty) include: AIM, BIRS, CIRM, Oberwolfach.

[edit]

Subject pages

I'm sure there are more of these out there!

[edit]

Research tools

[edit]

Professional societies and organizations

Many countries have their own national societies; I have not listed all of these, again because of the North American-centric nature of this site.

[edit]

Miscellaneous

Retrieved from "http://scripts.mit.edu/~kedlaya/wiki/index.php?title=Mathematics_Links"