Global Challenges for Women in Math Science

The program Global Challenges for Women in Math Science is funded by the Department of Mathematics. It aims to promote and demonstrate the excellency of female mathematicians, as well as support the development of international contacts and cooperations. There are two award categories, each with different levels - the Achievement Awards and the Entrepreneurial Awards.

Achievement Awards

The best mathematics female students at the levels Bachelor and Masters receive a prize in the form of financial support for enhancing mathematical education or presenting research results.

These awards are granted on the basis of the students' grades. The Service Office Studies selects recipients automatically based on their exam results. The chosen students will be contacted in November each year.

Female Bachelors' Students

The best female students in Bachelors' program recieve:

  • 1st Year: Book or software

  • 2nd Year: Refund for a software course

  • 3rd Year: Refund for an international Summer School for Bachelor students

Female Masters' Students

The best female students in Masters' program recieve:

  • 1st Year: Refund for a workshop or an international Summer School

  • 2nd Year: Refund for an international conference


Entrepreneurial Awards

Every year, we also award the Entrepreneurial Awards to female and male lecturers as part of the Global Challenges for Women in Math Science. Doctoral candidates can apply for the Junior Level; Post-docs, Professors and other faculty members can apply for both the Junior and Senior levels suitable to the described objectives. The awards to which female, male and diverse candidates may apply are marked "(m/f/d)".

Junior Entrepreneurial Awards

Doctoral candidates can receive the following awards:

  • Presentation of research results at an international conference
  • Research stay at an international research institution
  • Research stay at the TUM Department of Mathematics
  • Invitation of a female mathematician for a short research stay of max.1 month to the TUM Department of Mathematics (m/f/d)
  • Financial support for an international female doctoral candidate (m/f/d)
  • Organization of and participation in scientific events held online

Senior Entrepreneurial Awards

Postdocs, Professors and other members of the Department can apply for these prizes:

  • Research stay at an international research institution (max. 2 months)
  • Invitation of an international female mathematician for a research stay of max. 2 months (m/f/d)
  • Financial support for an application to an international granting agency
  • Organisation of a workshop for female mathematicians (m/f/d)
  • Organization of and participation in scientific events held online

We look forward to receiving your application for the Entrepreneurial Awards of the Global Challenges for Women program in Math Science. Send your documents by e-mail to Prof. Claudia Czado.

Application

Documents

  • CV
  • Project description and motivation (1-2 pages)
  • Invitation letter and guest researcher's CV (if applicable)
  • Conference or workshop program (if applicable)
  • Reference letter
  • Budget plan with estimated costs
  • Table: Project summary
    Please summarize your request here.

Deadline

Applications must be submitted by 1 February 2023

Description

Detailed project description in the application from 2017

 


Women in Math Science introduce themselves

Meet our winners of the Entrepreneurial and the Achievement Awards and their research projects.


News

Department Colloquium Summer 2024

Department, Colloquium | | Event

International researchers present their current work at the Colloquium of the Department of Mathematics. It will take place in lecture hall 3 (MI 00.06.011) on 10 July 2024. During the break, coffee, tea and pretzels will be served in the Magistrale. We cordially invite all interested parties!

Lecturedate: Wednesday, 10 July 2024

Inaugural lecture

10. Juli, 16-17 Uhr: Johannes Zimmer (TUM)

Organisator:innen:

Particles, partial differential equations and the arrow of time

Johannes Zimmer (TUM): Wednesday, 10. July 16:00 - 17:00 

 

Many processes in nature can be modeled on different scales; for

example with 'high resolution' using particles or 'zoomed out' using

partial differential equations (PDEs). One interest covered in this talk is

the derivation of PDEs describing the collective behaviour of (infinitely)

many particles: Can we derive the PDE? Can we machine learn the PDE from

particle data? It turns out that it is often important to understand the

structure of the equations; on the level of PDEs, a thermodynamic structure

based on energy and entropy is very helpful and will be described. The arrow

of time will play a central role: Small-scale models (of particle type) are

often can be reversible in time, while the large-scale description (of PDE type)

is irreversible. This seems at first puzzling, as the two models describe the

same system. We will discuss some mathematical approaches to understand this.

Computing tiling properties of polyforms

Craig Kaplan (University of Waterloo), TUM HS3: Mittwoch, 12. Juni, 14:30 - 15:30

 


Polyforms—shapes constructed by gluing together copies of cells in an underlying grid—are a convenient experimental tool with which to probe problems in tiling theory.  Unlike shapes more generally, they can be enumerated exhaustively, and are amenable to analysis using discrete computation.  Furthermore, polyforms appear to be quite expressive in terms of the range of tiling-theoretic behaviours they can exhibit.  I discuss the computation of isohedral numbers and Heesch numbers, both of which are connected to a variety of unsolved problems in tiling theory, and the connection of these problems to the world's first aperiodic monotiles, discovered in 2023.

 

Coffee afterwards