Arkadi Nemirovski (born March 14, 1947) is a professor at the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology .[ 5] He has been a leader in continuous optimization and is best known for his work on the ellipsoid method , modern interior-point methods and robust optimization .[ 6]
Biography
Nemirovski earned a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1974 from Moscow State University and a Doctor of Sciences in Mathematics degree in 1990 from the Institute of Cybernetics of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences in Kiev . He has won three prestigious prizes: the Fulkerson Prize , the George B. Dantzig Prize , and the John von Neumann Theory Prize .[ 7]
He was elected a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in 2017 "for the development of efficient algorithms for large-scale convex optimization problems",[ 8] and the U.S National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in 2020.[ 9] In 2023, Nemirovski and Yurii Nesterov were jointly awarded the 2023 WLA Prize in Computer Science or Mathematics "for their seminal work in convex optimization theory, including the theory of self-concordant functions and interior-point methods, a complexity theory of optimization, accelerated gradient methods, and methodological advances in robust optimization."[ 10]
Academic work
Nemirovski first proposed mirror descent along with David Yudin in 1983.[ 11]
His work with Yurii Nesterov in their 1994 book[ 12] is the first to point out that the interior point method can solve convex optimization problems, and the first to make a systematic study of semidefinite programming (SDP). Also in this book, they introduced the self-concordant functions which are useful in the analysis of Newton's method .[ 13]
Books
References
^ "The George B. Dantzig Prize" . 1991. Retrieved December 12, 2014 .
^ "Arkadi Nemirovski 2003 John von Neumann Theory Prize: Winner(s)" . 2003. Archived from the original on November 10, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014 .
^ "Marsha Berger and Arkadi Nemirovski Will Each Receive the 2019 Wiener Prize" . 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2022 .
^ "2023 WLA Prize Laureates" . 2023. Retrieved September 14, 2023 .
^ "Brief CV of Arkadi Nemirovski" . 2009. Retrieved December 12, 2014 .
^ "Arkadi Nemirovski awarded an Honorary DMath Degree" . 2009. Retrieved December 12, 2014 .
^ " "Arkadi Nemirovski, Ph.D. – ISyE" " . Archived from the original on 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2011-10-10 .
^ "Professor Arkadi S. Nemirovski" .
^ "2020 NAS Election" .
^ "Laureates of the 2023 WLA Prize Announced - News - WLA Prize" . www.thewlaprize.org . Retrieved 2023-11-29 .
^ Arkadi Nemirovsky and David Yudin. Problem Complexity and Method Efficiency in Optimization. John Wiley & Sons, 1983
^ Nesterov, Yurii; Arkadii, Nemirovskii (1995). Interior-Point Polynomial Algorithms in Convex Programming . Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. ISBN 0898715156 .
^ Boyd, Stephen P.; Vandenberghe, Lieven (2004). Convex Optimization (PDF) . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83378-3 . Retrieved October 15, 2011 .
^ Tseng, Paul (2004). "Review of Lectures on modern convex optimization: analysis, algorithms and engineering applications , by Aharon Ben-Tal and Arkadi Nemirovski" . Math. Comp . 73 : 1040. doi :10.1090/S0025-5718-03-01670-3 .
External links
International National Academics People Other