The Stefan Bergman Fellowship

The Stefan Bergman Fellowship was established in 2023 with the proceeds of the Stefan Bergman Trust to support the advancement of the research portfolio of a mathematician who specializes in the areas of real analysis, complex analysis, or partial differential equations. One award will be made for the 2025-2026 academic year in the amount of US$25,000. AMS membership will also be offered to the recipient for the duration of the fellowship.

Awardees may use the fellowship in any way that most effectively enables their research — for instance, for release time, participation in special research programs, travel support, childcare, etc. The award is issued through the recipient's institution, however, institutions may not charge costs of any kind to AMS fellowships, such as fringe benefit rate, indirect costs, or overhead.

Applications are currently being accepted on MathPrograms from July 15 through September 30, 2024 (11:59pm EDT).

Apply to the Stefan Bergman Fellowship

Most Recent Fellowship: 2024

José Ramón Madrid Padilla, assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics at Virginia Tech, has been awarded the inaugural 2024-2025 Stefan Bergman Fellowship. Madrid Padilla’s research focuses on the area of harmonic analysis and its connections to related areas such as number theory, combinatorics, probability, ergodic theory, and PDEs.

Fellowship announcement as seen in the news release.

See previous winners

Stefan Bergman
Stefan Bergman
Photo by Paul Halmos

Stefan Bergman (1895-1977), is best known for his research in several complex variables, as well as the Bergman projection and the Bergman kernel function that bear his name.

Stefan Bergman was born into a Jewish family in what is now Poland. He earned his Engineering degree from the University of Vienna in 1920 and his doctorate in the Institute for Applied Mathematics at the Berlin University in 1922, under Richard von Mises.

In 1930 Bergman was lecturing at the University of Berlin. Between 1933 and 1939 he moved several times to escape anti-Semitic violence, ultimately going to the United States. He lectured first at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yeshiva College, and Brown University. In 1945 he joined von Mises in Harvard.

In 1950 Bergman married Adele Adlersberg. His stay at Harvard lasted until 1952 when he moved to Stanford University, where he spent the rest of his career.

– From Bergman's MacTutor biography

Background

The fellowship honors the memory of Stefan Bergman, best known for his research in several complex variables, as well as the Bergman projection and the Bergman kernel function that bear his name. He was an AMS member for 35 years. When his wife Adele Bergman died, the terms of her will stipulated that funds should go toward a special prize in her husband’s honor.

In 2023 the AMS allocated the Stefan Bergman Endowment to establish the Stefan Bergman Fellowship as the society's first fellowship specifically for early-career mathematicians.

Eligibility

Applications will be accepted from mathematicians at a US institution who

  • specialize in the areas of real analysis, complex analysis, or partial differential equations;
  • have not received tenure or comparable (at the discretion of the selection committee);
  • and have not held significant fellowship support.

How to Apply

The application form requires the following information.

  • Research Statement: a statement regarding the applicant's overall program of research, past and planned. The statement should be no more than three pages, including bibliographical references.
  • Research Plan: a detailed research plan for the fellowship period that is contextualized by the research statement. The plan should include a description of how the fellowship will support the applicant's success. The plan should be no more than one page.
  • Key Professional Accomplishments: a list of up ten publications and/or other professional activities that demonstrate the applicant's contributions to the mathematics profession. This list should be no more than one page.
  • NSF-style Summary of Current and Pending Support: to create an NSF Current and Pending Support document, visit https://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sciencv, log into your NSF account, follow the prompts in the walk-through form, select "Create new document," choose the "NSF Current and Pending (Other) Support" format, and download the PDF.​​​​​​
  • NSF-style Biographical Sketch: to create the NSF-style biographical sketch, visit https://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sciencv, log into your NSF account, follow the prompts in the walk-through form, select "Create new document," choose the "NSF Biographical Sketch" format, and download the PDF.
  • References: a list of three reference writers who can address the applicant’s accomplishments and research potential. Use the email links on the coversheet to send a password and instructions directly to the writers.

Application Deadlines

Applications will be accepted on MathPrograms from July 15 through September 30, 2024 (11:59pm EDT).

Contact

Provide your email to receive occasional communications from the AMS about research fellowships and other opportunities
Questions about the Bergman Fellowship? Email us.

For all other Programs inquiries email AMS Programs staff.

Return to top ↑