Julia Wolf
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Julia Wolf
Summary
Julia Wolf is a human[1]. She worked as a mathematician[2]. She ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,296 of 1,000,298).[3]
Key Facts
- Julia Wolf held citizenship in United Kingdom[4].
- Julia Wolf worked as a mathematician[2].
- Julia Wolf's field of work was additive combinatorics[5].
- Among Julia Wolf's employers was University of Bristol[6].
- Julia Wolf was employed by University of Cambridge[7].
- Julia Wolf's education included a stint at Clare College[8].
- Julia Wolf's education included a stint at University of Cambridge[9].
- Julia Wolf's doctoral advisor was Timothy Gowers[10].
- Julia Wolf received the Anne Bennett Prize[11].
- Julia Wolf received the Forder Lectureship[12].
- Julia Wolf is recorded as female[13].
- Julia Wolf's instance of is recorded as human[14].
- Julia Wolf supervised Luka Rimanić as a doctoral student[15].
- Julia Wolf supervised Pierre-Yves Bienvenu as a doctoral student[16].
- Julia Wolf supervised Leo Versteegen as a doctoral student[17].
- Julia Wolf's Mathematics Genealogy Project ID is recorded as 123526[18].
- Julia Wolf's family name is recorded as Wolf[19].
- Julia Wolf's given name is recorded as Julia[20].
- Julia Wolf's official website is recorded as http://www.juliawolf.org/[21].
- Julia Wolf's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as English[22].
- Julia Wolf's zbMATH author ID is recorded as wolf.julia[23].
- Julia Wolf's DBLP author ID is recorded as 36/7989[24].
- Julia Wolf's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11hdlnkjx9[25].
- Julia Wolf's MR Author ID is recorded as 850181[26].
- Julia Wolf's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[27].
Body
Education
Educated at Clare College[8], a college of the University of Cambridge[28], in United Kingdom[29], founded in 1326[30] and University of Cambridge[9], a collegiate university[31], in United Kingdom[32], founded in 1209[33], headquartered in Cambridge[34]. Julia Wolf's doctoral advisor was Timothy Gowers[10].
Career and Affiliations
Julia Wolf's professions included mathematician[2]. Her field of work was additive combinatorics[5]. Employers include University of Bristol[6], a public university[35], in United Kingdom[36], founded in 1909[37], headquartered in Bristol[38] and University of Cambridge[7], a collegiate university[39], in United Kingdom[40], founded in 1209[41], headquartered in Cambridge[42]. Doctoral students include Luka Rimanić[15]; Pierre-Yves Bienvenu[16]; and Leo Versteegen[17], a mathematician[43], of United States[44].
Recognition
Awards received include Anne Bennett Prize[11], a class of award[45] and Forder Lectureship[12], an award[46], in New Zealand[47], founded in 1986[48].
Why It Matters
Julia Wolf ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5 views/month, #7,296 of 1,000,298).[3]
FAQs
What did Julia Wolf do for work?
Julia Wolf worked as mathematician[2].
Where did Julia Wolf go to school?
Julia Wolf was educated at Clare College[8] and University of Cambridge[9].
What awards did Julia Wolf receive?
Honors received include Anne Bennett Prize[11] and Forder Lectureship[12].