Loredana Lanzani
Loredana Lanzani (born 1965)[1] is an Italian-American mathematician specializing in harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, and complex analysis. She is a professor of mathematics at Syracuse University.
Education and career
[edit]Lanzani earned a laurea from the University of Rome Tor Vergata in 1989, and completed a Ph.D. at Purdue University in 1997.[2] Her dissertation, A New Perspective On The Cauchy Transform For Non-Smooth Domains In The Plane And Applications, was supervised by Steven R. Bell.[3]
She became an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas in 1997, and moved up the academic ranks there until becoming a full professor in 2008, also being given the Robert C. & Sandra Connor Endowed Faculty Fellowship in the same year. From 2011 to 2013 she was a program director for the National Science Foundation, and in 2014 she took her present position as a professor of mathematics at Syracuse University.[2]
Recognition
[edit]Lanzani was named a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, in the 2022 class of fellows, "for contributions to function theory in one and several complex variables".[4][5] She became the first Syracuse University mathematician to win this honor.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Birth year from Library of Congress catalog entry, retrieved 2021-11-07
- ^ a b Curriculum vitae (PDF), 2018, retrieved 2021-11-07
- ^ Loredana Lanzani at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ^ 2022 Class of Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2021-11-05
- ^ a b Bernardi, Dan (5 November 2021), "Professor Loredana Lanzani Named a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society", A&S News, Syracuse University College of Arts & Sciences, retrieved 2021-11-05
External links
[edit]- Home page
- Loredana Lanzani publications indexed by Google Scholar
- 1965 births
- Living people
- Italian mathematicians
- Italian women mathematicians
- 20th-century American mathematicians
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- University of Rome Tor Vergata alumni
- Purdue University alumni
- University of Arkansas faculty
- Syracuse University faculty
- Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
- 20th-century American women mathematicians
- 21st-century American women mathematicians