The International Society for Analysis, its Applications and Computation (ISAAC)[1] was founded at the University of Delaware in 1996 and is dedicated to the promotion of mathematical analysis and its applications. It has organized international congresses biannually since 1996 and supported regional conferences in various fields of analysis in developing countries since then. The society has members from all continents. Robert Gilbert (University of Delaware), Heinrich Begehr (Free University Berlin), MW Wong (York University), Michael Ruzhansky (Imperial College London), Luigi Rodino (University of Turin) and Michael Reissig (TU Bergakademie Freiberg) served as its past presidents. [2] The current president is Uwe Kähler (University of Aveiro). [3]
Conferences
editInternational congresses organized by ISAAC took place in:
- University of Delaware (1996)
- Fukuoka University (1998)
- Free University Berlin (2001)
- Toronto University (2003)
- University of Catania (2005)
- Ankara University (2007)
- Imperial College London (2009)
- Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (2011)
- Krakow University (2013)
- University of Macao (2015)
- Linnaeus University Växjö (2017)[4][5]
- University of Aveiro (2019)
- Ghent University (2021) (in online form)
These congresses have attracted an increasing number of analysts and applied mathematicians from around the world.[2] The next congresses will take place at the University of Sao Paulo - Ribeirao Preto in 2023 and at the Nazarbayev University in Nur-Sultan (Kazakhstan) in 2025.
References
edit- ^ "ISAAC homepage". Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ a b H. Begehr; R.P. Gilbert; L. Rodino; M. Ruzhansky; M.W. Wong (2016). "ISAAC: How it became what it is". In Dang, Pei; Ku, Min; Qian, Tao; Rodino, Luigi (eds.). New Trends in Analysis and Interdisciplinary Applications. Springer. pp. xix–liv. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-48812-7. ISBN 978-3-319-48810-3.
- ^ "Einer, der Weltoffenheit lebt". Freie Presse Chemnitz. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^ "ISAAC – well-established congress in Växjö". Linnaeus University Växjö. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
- ^ "Världens främsta matematikforskare samlas i Växjö". SVT Nyheter Småland. Retrieved 8 March 2018.