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The Story Collider

In Honor of Pi Day: Stories about math

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Performing Arts, Society & Culture, Arts, Personal Journals, Science

4.4 • 824 Ratings

šŸ—“ļø 9 March 2018

ā±ļø 30 minutes

šŸ§¾ļø Download transcript

Summary

This week, in honor of Pi Day on March 14, we're presenting two stories from mathematicians.

Part 1:Ā After a reluctant start, mathematician Ken Ono makes an unexpected discovery.

Part 2:Ā Mathematician Piper Harron deals with harassment after standing up for diversity in math.

Ken Ono is the Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Mathematics at Emory University. He is the Vice President of the American Mathematical Society, and he considered to be an expert in the theory of integer partitions and modular forms. His contributions include several monographs and over 160 research and popular articles in number theory, combinatorics and algebra. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA and has received many awards for his research in number theory, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Packard Fellowship and a Sloan Fellowship. He was awarded a Presidential Early Career Award for Science and Engineering (PECASE) by Bill Clinton in 2000 and he was named the National Science Foundation’s Distinguished Teaching Scholar in 2005. He serves as Editor-in-Chief for two Springer-Nature journals and is an editor of Springer's The Ramanujan Journal. He was also an Associate Producer of the Hollywood film The Man Who Knew Infinity which starred Jeremy Irons and Dev Patel.

Piper Harron received her PhD in mathematics from Princeton University in January 2016. More interestingly, she started in 2003, left in 2009, lectured at Northeastern for three semesters, then stopped working and had two children born in 2011 and 2014. HerĀ PhD thesisĀ received recognition for its humorous style and blunt social commentary (Spoiler: math culture is oppressive), and she has traveled to many institutions around the country and in Canada to talk about her experiences trying to survive other people's good intentions. She is currently a postdoc in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

A science story, huh?

0:04.0

Is NYU a scientist?

0:06.0

I felt it.

0:07.0

I felt.

0:08.0

I was so...

0:09.0

And I just thought, well, I figured it out.

0:11.0

It was that golden moment.

0:13.0

Because science was on my side.

0:19.0

Hey guys, welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science.

0:27.6

I am your host, Aaron Barker, and this week we're presenting stories about math, in honor of

0:33.5

Pi Day this Wednesday, March 14th.

0:36.4

Pie Day, you may be slightly disappointed to learn,

0:39.0

as I was, is not a day centered around the eating of pies. It's actually in celebration of the

0:44.4

mathematical constant pie, which is a very long number that begins 3.14. Hence, March 14th. You get it.

0:53.1

We're all on the same page here.

0:55.1

So to join in the celebration, we have two stories from mathematicians this week.

0:59.9

Both were recorded in January 2018 at the tipsy crow in San Diego, California,

1:05.3

at our show in partnership with Springer Nature and in conjunction with the American

1:09.1

Mathematical Society's joint mathematics

1:11.6

meeting. Our first story is from Ken Ono.

1:18.6

I'm up here by accident.

1:24.6

So my father, some of you may know, was a mathematician.

...

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