Ronen Eldan
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Ronen Eldan
Summary
Ronen Eldan is a human[1]. He was born in Tel Aviv[2]. He was born on 1980[3]. He worked as a mathematician[4] and university teacher[5]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (54 views/month, #7,274 of 1,000,298).[6]
Key Facts
- Ronen Eldan was born in Tel Aviv[2].
- Ronen Eldan was born on 1980[3].
- Ronen Eldan held citizenship in Israel[7].
- Ronen Eldan's professions included mathematician[4].
- Ronen Eldan's professions included university teacher[5].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was mathematics[8].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was computer science[9].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was artificial intelligence[10].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was probability[11].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was functional analysis[12].
- Ronen Eldan's field of work was computational geometry[13].
- Ronen Eldan was employed by Weizmann Institute of Science[14].
- Ronen Eldan's education included a stint at Tel Aviv University[15].
- Ronen Eldan was educated at University of Washington[16].
- Ronen Eldan's education included a stint at Open University of Israel[17].
- Ronen Eldan's doctoral advisor was Vitali Milman[18].
- Ronen Eldan's doctoral advisor was Bo'az Klartag[19].
- Ronen Eldan received the Nessyahu prize[20].
- Ronen Eldan received the Anna and Lajos Erdős Prize in Mathematics[21].
- Ronen Eldan received the Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists[22].
- Ronen Eldan received the Breakthrough Prize[23].
- Ronen Eldan is recorded as male[24].
- Ronen Eldan's instance of is recorded as human[25].
- Ronen Eldan's Commons category is recorded as Ronen Eldan[26].
- Ronen Eldan earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Ronen Eldan's place of birth was Tel Aviv[2]. He was born on 1980[3].
Education
Educated at Tel Aviv University[15], a public university[28], in Israel[29], founded in 1956[30], headquartered in Tel Aviv[31]; University of Washington[16], a public research university[32], in United States[33], founded in 1861[34]; and Open University of Israel[17], a public university[35], in Israel[36], founded in 1974[37]. Doctoral advisors include Vitali Milman[18], a mathematician[38], b. 1939[39], of Soviet Union[40], awarded the The EMET Prize for Art, Science and Culture[41], specialised in functional analysis[42] and Bo'az Klartag[19], a mathematician[43], b. 1978[44], of Israel[45], awarded the Salem Prize[46]. Ronen Eldan earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[27].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include mathematician[4] and university teacher[5]. Fields of work include mathematics[8], an academic discipline[47]; computer science[9], an academic discipline[48]; artificial intelligence[10], a type of technology[49]; probability[11], a probability measure[50]; functional analysis[12], a branch of mathematics[51]; and computational geometry[13], a branch of computer science[52]. Among Ronen Eldan's employers was Weizmann Institute of Science[14].
Recognition
Awards received include Nessyahu prize[20], a science award[53], in Israel[54], founded in 1995[55]; Anna and Lajos Erdős Prize in Mathematics[21], a science award[56], in Israel[57], founded in 1977[58]; Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists[22], an award[59], founded in 2007[60]; and Breakthrough Prize[23], a science award[61], founded in 2012[62].
Why It Matters
Ronen Eldan ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (54 views/month, #7,274 of 1,000,298).[6] He has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[63]
FAQs
Where was Ronen Eldan born?
Ronen Eldan's place of birth was Tel Aviv[2].
What did Ronen Eldan do for work?
Ronen Eldan worked as mathematician[4] and university teacher[5].
Where did Ronen Eldan go to school?
Ronen Eldan was educated at Tel Aviv University[15], University of Washington[16], and Open University of Israel[17].
What awards did Ronen Eldan receive?
Honors received include Nessyahu prize[20], Anna and Lajos Erdős Prize in Mathematics[21], Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists[22], and Breakthrough Prize[23].