Serena Dipierro

Serena Dipierro is an Italian mathematician whose research involves partial differential equations, the regularity of their solution, their phase transitions, nonlocal operators, and free boundary problems, with applications including population dynamics, quantum mechanics, crystallography, and mathematical finance.[1][2] She is a professor in the School of Physics, Mathematics and Computing at the University of Western Australia, where she heads the department of mathematics and statistics.[3]

Education and career

After earning a laurea at the University of Bari in 2006, and a master's degree with Lorenzo D’Ambrosio at the same university in 2008,[4] Dipierro finished a Ph.D. in mathematics at the International School for Advanced Studies in Trieste in 2012. Her dissertation, Concentration phenomena for singularly perturbed elliptic problems and related topics, was supervised by Andrea Malchiodi.[5]

She was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Chile and University of Edinburgh, and a Humboldt Fellow, and a faculty member at the University of Melbourne and University of Milan before taking her present position at the University of Western Australia in 2018.[3]

Book

With María Medina de la Torre and Enrico Valdinoci, Dipierro is a coauthor of the monograph Fractional Elliptic Problems with Critical Growth in the Whole of (arXiv:1506.01748; Edizioni Della Normale, 2017).[6]

Recognition

References

  1. ^ a b 2021 AustMS Medal – citation for Serena Dipierro (PDF), Australian Mathematical Society, retrieved 2022-01-05
  2. ^ "Serena Dipierro", Role models, Women in Technology Western Australia, retrieved 2022-01-05
  3. ^ a b "Serena Dipierro", Profiles, University of Western Australia, retrieved 2022-01-05
  4. ^ Curriculum vitae, Universal Scientific Education and Research Network, retrieved 2022-01-05
  5. ^ Serena Dipierro at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. ^ Reviews of Fractional Elliptic Problems with Critical Growth in the Whole of : Raffaella Servadei, Zbl 1375.49001; Andrey I. Zahariev, MR3617721
  7. ^ "2024 awardees | Australian Academy of Science". www.science.org.au. Retrieved 2024-04-06.