Elena Braverman

Summary

Elena Yanovna Braverman (née Lumelskaya, Russian: Елена Яновна Браверман) is a Russian, Israeli, and Canadian mathematician known for her research in delay differential equations, difference equations, and population dynamics. She is a professor of mathematics and applied mathematics at the University of Calgary,[1] and one of the editors-in-chief of the journal Advances in Difference Equations.[2]

Education and career edit

Braverman is originally from the Soviet Union,[3] and earned bachelor's and master's degrees at Perm State University in 1981 and 1983 respectively.[1] She defended her Ph.D. at Ural State University in 1990. Her dissertation, Linear impulsive functional differential equations, was supervised by Nikolai V. Azbelev.[4]

In 1992, she emigrated to Israel, where she took a postdoctoral research position at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. She remained in Israel for most of the following decade, with teaching positions at the Technion and at the ORT Braude College of Engineering.[3]

After visiting Yale University in 2001–2002, she moved to her present position at the University of Calgary in 2002. She was tenured there in 2007 and promoted to full professor in 2011.[3]

Book edit

Braverman is a co-author of the book Nonoscillation Theory of Functional Differential Equations with Applications (with Ravi P. Agarwal, Leonid Berezansky, and Alexander Domoshnitsky, Springer, 2012).[5]

Family edit

Braverman is the daughter of mathematical statistician Yan Petrovich Lumel'skii [ru]. Braverman's mother, Ludmila Mikhailovna Tsirulnikova, was also a university-level physics teacher,[3] whose father was Soviet weapons engineer Mikhail Yuryevich Tsirulnikov [ru]. Braverman is the mother of theoretical computer scientist Mark Braverman.[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Elena Braverman", Faculty profiles, University of Calgary Department of Mathematics and Statistics, retrieved 2019-08-25
  2. ^ "Editorial board", Advances in Difference Equations, Springer, retrieved 2019-08-25
  3. ^ a b c d "Dr. Elena Braverman", STEM from the Prairies, NSERC Chair for Women in Science & Engineering, retrieved 2019-08-25
  4. ^ Elena Braverman at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ Karpuz, Başak, "Review of Nonoscillation Theory of Functional Differential Equations with Applications", Mathematical Reviews, MR 2908263
  6. ^ For the connection between Elena and Mark Braverman, see the dedication of Mark Braverman's master's thesis, Computational Complexity of Euclidean Sets: Hyperbolic Julia Sets are Poly-Time Computable, University of Toronto, 2004.

External links edit