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Benedek Bollobás

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Benedek Bollobás
NameBenedek Bollobás
Birth date1993
NationalityHungarian
FieldsMathematics
Alma materEötvös Loránd University
Known forCombinatorics, Graph Theory

Benedek Bollobás is a Hungarian mathematician active in combinatorics and graph theory, connected with several European research centers and international collaborations; he has contributed to extremal combinatorics, probabilistic methods, and discrete structures across joint work with established figures and institutions. His work is situated in the context of contemporary developments linked to classical problems addressed by researchers associated with the Hungarian mathematical tradition and broader networks spanning Cambridge, Princeton University, University of Cambridge, and continental European universities.

Early life and education

Born in Budapest, Bollobás received his early schooling in Hungary and proceeded to university studies at Eötvös Loránd University and later graduate training influenced by faculty associated with the Hungarian combinatorial school and connections to researchers from Trinity College, Cambridge, University of Oxford, Imperial College London, and other British institutions. During his formative years he engaged with seminars and workshops organized by groups from the London Mathematical Society, the European Mathematical Society, the Institute of Mathematics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and international programs tied to the International Mathematical Olympiad community and summer schools convened at venues such as Bolyai Institute and regional conferences in Vienna and Prague.

Mathematical career and positions

Bollobás has held appointments and visiting positions at research centers and departments including faculties associated with Eötvös Loránd University, research institutes linked to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and collaborative stints at departments in Cambridge, Princeton University, ETH Zurich, and laboratories affiliated with the Mathematical Institute, Oxford. He has participated in research programs and lecture series supported by organizations such as the European Research Council, the Royal Society, the National Science Foundation, and networks coordinated through the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and the Max Planck Society. His positions have included roles in doctoral supervision tied to graduate schools with links to Imperial College London, University of Warwick, and consortiums involving CNRS-affiliated laboratories.

Major contributions and research

Bollobás's research focuses on extremal combinatorics, probabilistic combinatorics, graph limits, and discrete probabilistic methods, intersecting traditions exemplified by work originating in the schools of Paul Erdős, Pál Erdős, Alfréd Rényi, and developments connected to the graph theoretical lines of inquiry associated with Claude Berge, László Lovász, Endre Szemerédi, and Miklós Ajtai. He has advanced problems related to Turán-type extremal questions, Ramsey theory, random graph processes as studied in the contexts shaped by Erdős–Rényi model, and concentration inequalities influenced by methods originating from Paul Erdős collaborations and probabilistic combinatorics programs at Princeton University and Cambridge. His contributions engage with concepts paralleling the work of Noga Alon, Jeff Kahn, Van H. Vu, Béla Bollobás (note: different individual), and methodological frameworks associated with the Szemerédi regularity lemma, the Hypergraph Turán problem, and graph limit theory developed alongside ideas from Lovász and colleagues at the Alfréd Rényi Institute. He has collaborated on problems linking discrete geometry threads prominent at conferences in Berlin, Paris, and Amsterdam and on probabilistic techniques echoed in work presented at meetings of the American Mathematical Society and the European Mathematical Society.

Awards and honors

Bollobás's recognitions include prizes and fellowships typical of researchers active within European and international mathematics communities, involving nominations and support from institutions such as the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the Royal Society, the European Research Council, and funding agencies including the National Research, Development and Innovation Office of Hungary and collaborative grants with bodies like the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions. His honors reflect engagement with prize committees and conference invitations from societies such as the London Mathematical Society, the American Mathematical Society, and the European Mathematical Society.

Selected publications

- Contributions in leading journals and conference proceedings associated with the London Mathematical Society, the American Mathematical Society, and the European Mathematical Society on topics including extremal graph theory, probabilistic methods, and combinatorial constructions. - Articles in periodicals connected to editorial boards involving publishers and societies like the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, Cambridge University Press, and university presses tied to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. - Collaborative papers appearing in collections from conferences sponsored by organizations such as the Royal Society, the European Research Council, and meetings at institutions like Princeton University, University of Cambridge, and the Alfréd Rényi Institute.

Category:Hungarian mathematicians Category:Combinatorialists