Generated by GPT-5-mini| International Association of Mathematical Physics | |
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| Name | International Association of Mathematical Physics |
| Abbreviation | IAMP |
| Formation | 1976 |
| Type | Learned society |
| Headquarters | Geneva |
| Region served | International |
| Leader title | President |
International Association of Mathematical Physics is a learned society connecting researchers in mathematical physics, statistical mechanics, and quantum field theory with links to institutions such as CERN, Princeton University, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, University of Cambridge and Harvard University. Founded amid interactions between figures from Moscow State University, ETH Zurich, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Université Paris-Sud and University of California, Berkeley, the organization fosters collaboration among scholars associated with Fields Institute, Mathematical Institute, Oxford, Max Planck Society and Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Its activities intersect research traditions from École Normale Supérieure, Steklov Institute of Mathematics, Rutgers University, University of Tokyo and California Institute of Technology.
The association emerged in the context of meetings that included participants from International Congress of Mathematicians, Solvay Conference, NATO Advanced Study Institute, European Mathematical Society and American Mathematical Society gatherings. Early leadership drew from scholars affiliated with Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Brown University. Throughout the late 20th century it maintained ties to initiatives at Royal Society, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Bell Labs. Cold War era exchanges involved delegates from Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, CERN and Institut Henri Poincaré, while later expansion linked groups at Australian National University, University of Toronto, SISSA and Weizmann Institute of Science.
The association promotes research across subfields engaged at McGill University, Yale University, Columbia University, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota and Ohio State University. It encourages interactions between centers such as Niels Bohr Institute, RIKEN, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Advanced Study and Karpacz School of Theoretical Physics. Activities include organizing programs in collaboration with International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Banff International Research Station, Mathematical Sciences Research Institute and CIRM Luminy, fostering networks linking CERN theorists, Los Alamos computational researchers, MPI for Mathematics analysts and University of Cambridge geometers. The association supports research themes present at Princeton University seminars, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics workshops, University of Bonn schools and Imperial College London colloquia.
Membership comprises individuals and societies connected to universities and institutes such as University of Paris, University of California, San Diego, University of Chicago, University of British Columbia and University of Geneva. Governance structures mirror frameworks used by International Mathematical Union, European Mathematical Society, American Physical Society, Royal Society and Academia Europaea. Executive committees have included researchers with appointments at University of Warsaw, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Humboldt University of Berlin, Seoul National University and Monash University. Election procedures draw on models implemented at National Academy of Sciences, Royal Society of Canada and Indian Academy of Sciences while statutes reference practices of UNESCO-affiliated scholarly bodies.
The association organizes triennial and biennial congresses comparable to International Congress on Mathematical Physics, often held alongside meetings at International Congress of Mathematicians, Solvay Conference, Gothenburg University, University of Edinburgh and ETH Zurich. It sponsors thematic schools at venues such as Scuola Internazionale di Fisica Enrico Fermi, Les Houches Summer School, CERMICS, ICMS and Banff Centre, and co-organizes series with Springer Science+Business Media, Cambridge University Press, Elsevier and American Institute of Physics. Proceedings and journals associated with members appear in outlets like Communications in Mathematical Physics, Journal of Statistical Physics, Annales Henri Poincaré, Letters in Mathematical Physics and Reviews in Mathematical Physics, reflecting scholarship produced at Princeton University Press, Oxford University Press and Springer-Verlag.
The association recognizes achievements with prizes and lectures that echo honors such as the Fields Medal, Abel Prize, Crafoord Prize, Breakthrough Prize and Dirac Medal. It endorses awards analogous to those given by European Mathematical Society, American Mathematical Society and International Mathematical Union, and supports named lectureships linked to institutions like Institute for Advanced Study, Max Planck Institute and Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics. Recipients often hold positions at Harvard University, Stanford University, Princeton University, ETH Zurich and University of Cambridge and have contributed to developments traceable to research in quantum field theory at CERN and Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Category:Mathematical physics organizations