Monday, March 29, 2010
Russian Math Genius Nixes One Million Dollar Award
'Nyet' to $1 million? Math genius may reject award
Mar 29 2010
MALCOLM RITTER and IRINA TITOVA - Associated Press Writers
Grigory Perelman
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia— Who doesn't want to be a millionaire? Maybe a 43-year-old unemployed bachelor who lives with his elderly mother in Russia _ and who won $1 million for solving a problem that has stumped mathematicians for a century.
Grigory Perelman can't decide if he wants the money.
"He said he would need to think about it," said James Carlson, who telephoned Perelman with the news he had won the Millennium Prize awarded by the Clay Mathematics Institute of Cambridge, Mass.
Carlson said he wasn't too surprised by the apparent lack of interest from Perelman, a reclusive genius who has a history of refusing big prizes.
In 2006, Perelman made headlines when he stayed away from the ceremony in Madrid where he was supposed to get a Fields Medal, often called the Nobel prize of mathematics. He remained at home in St. Petersburg instead.
As for the new prize, Perelman (PER-il-mahn) told a local television station he hasn't made a decision on whether to accept the money, and that Carlson's institute will be the first to know when he does.
Sergei Rukshin, Perelman's high school math teacher, told The Associated Press on Monday that Perelman is still unsure whether to accept it.
"I know that this time he is seriously thinking about whether he will accept the prize. He still has some time," Rukshin said. The awards ceremony is in June.
Rukshin said Perelman has been without work for four years and has declined all job offers. He previously worked at the Steklov Mathematics Institute.
Perelman was honored for proving the Poincare (pwan-kah-RAY) conjecture, which deals with shapes that exist in four or more dimensions, rather than the familiar three dimensions. The conjecture proposes a test for determining whether a shape in such space, no matter how distorted, is a three-dimensional sphere.
Tamara Yefimova, a deputy director of Perelman's high school who has known the mathematician since he was a student there, said that once he started working on the Poincare conjecture he became totally absorbed in it.
She said Perelman stopped visiting his old school to help students and stopped attending meetings of the city's math society.
"It could have been only him who would solve the Poincare conjecture," Yefimova said.
Indeed, Carlson said, Perelman's solution was "a truly amazing piece of mathematics."
Perelman lives in an aging three-room high-rise apartment with his mother and doesn't like to pick up awards he's won, money or not.
When you are a genius "It's easy to grow up feeling bad about yourself and maybe even feeling like a freak and sort of reacting accordingly," so social skills can suffer, said a California psycologist.
Mathematicians will gather in Paris in June to celebrate Perelman's achievement and put on some kind of ceremony whether he's there or not.
Does Carlson care whether Perelman shows up?
"It would be nice," Carlson said. "But on the other hand, I respect his desire for calm and tranquility."
___
Associated Press Science Writer Malcolm Ritter reported from New York.
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