Jennifer Leigh Morse is a mathematician specializing in algebraic combinatorics. She is a professor of mathematics at the University of Virginia.[1]

Research

Morse's interests in algebraic combinatorics include representation theory and applications to statistical physics, symmetric functions, Young tableaux, and -Schur functions, which are a generalization of Schur polynomials.[2]

Education and career

Morse earned her Ph.D. in 1999 from the University of California, San Diego. Her dissertation, Explicit Expansions for Knop-Sahi and Macdonald Polynomials, was supervised by Adriano Garsia.[3]

She has been a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania, at the University of Miami, and at Drexel University before moving to the University of Virginia in 2017.[2]

Book

Morse is one of six coauthors of the book -Schur Functions and Affine Schubert Calculus (Fields Institute Monographs 33, Springer, 2014).[4]

Recognition

Morse was named a Simons Fellow in Mathematics in 2012 and again in 2021.[5] She was elected as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in the 2021 class of fellows, "for contributions to algebraic combinatorics and representation theory and service to the mathematical community".[6]

References

  1. "Jennifer Leigh Morse", Faculty directory, University of Virginia, retrieved 2020-11-02
  2. 1 2 "Jennifer Morse" (PDF), New faculty profiles, Virginia Math Bulletin, University of Virginia Mathematics Department, vol. 1, no. 4, p. 3, June 2017
  3. Jennifer Morse at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. Reviews of -Schur Functions and Affine Schubert Calculus: Arthur L. B. Yang, MR3379711; Nikita Kalinin, Zbl 1360.14004
  5. Simons Fellows in Mathematics, Simons Foundation, retrieved 2022-02-13
  6. 2021 Class of Fellows of the AMS, American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2020-11-02
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