-
Thailand says Cambodia must announce ceasefire 'first' to stop fighting
-
M23 militia says to pull out of key DR Congo city at US's request
-
Thousands of glaciers to melt each year by mid-century: study
-
China to impose anti-dumping duties on EU pork for five years
-
Nepal starts tiger census to track recovery
-
Economic losses from natural disasters down by a third in 2025: Swiss Re
-
Indonesians reeling from flood devastation plea for global help
-
Timeline: How the Bondi Beach mass shooting unfolded
-
On the campaign trail in a tug-of-war Myanmar town
-
Bondi Beach suspect visited Philippines on Indian passport
-
Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban
-
Djokovic to warm up for Australian Open in Adelaide
-
Man bailed for fire protest on track at Hong Kong's richest horse race
-
Men's ATP tennis to apply extreme heat rule from 2026
-
Cunningham leads Pistons past Celtics, Nuggets outlast Rockets
-
10-year-old girl, Holocaust survivors among Bondi Beach dead
-
Steelers edge towards NFL playoffs as Dolphins eliminated
-
Australian PM says 'Islamic State ideology' drove Bondi Beach gunmen
-
Canada plow-maker can't clear path through Trump tariffs
-
Bank of Japan expected to hike rates to 30-year high
-
Cunningham leads Pistons past Celtics
-
Stokes tells England to 'show a bit of dog' in must-win Adelaide Test
-
EU to unveil plan to tackle housing crisis
-
EU set to scrap 2035 combustion-engine ban in car industry boost
-
Australian PM visits Bondi Beach hero in hospital
-
'Easiest scam in the world': Musicians sound alarm over AI impersonators
-
'Waiting to die': the dirty business of recycling in Vietnam
-
Asian markets retreat ahead of US jobs as tech worries weigh
-
Security beefed up for Ashes Adelaide Test after Bondi shooting
-
Famed Jerusalem stone still sells despite West Bank economic woes
-
Trump sues BBC for $10 billion over documentary speech edit
-
Chile follows Latin American neighbors in lurching right
-
Will OpenAI be the next tech giant or next Netscape?
-
Khawaja left out as Australia's Cummins, Lyon back for 3rd Ashes Test
-
Australia PM says 'Islamic State ideology' drove Bondi Beach shooters
-
Scheffler wins fourth straight PGA Tour Player of the Year
-
Security beefed up for Ashes Test after Bondi shooting
-
Wembanyama blocking Knicks path in NBA Cup final
-
Amorim seeks clinical Man Utd after 'crazy' Bournemouth clash
-
Man Utd blow lead three times in 4-4 Bournemouth thriller
-
Stokes calls on England to 'show a bit of dog' in must-win Adelaide Test
-
Trump 'considering' push to reclassify marijuana as less dangerous
-
Chiefs coach Reid backing Mahomes recovery after knee injury
-
Trump says Ukraine deal close, Europe proposes peace force
-
French minister urges angry farmers to trust cow culls, vaccines
-
Angelina Jolie reveals mastectomy scars in Time France magazine
-
Paris Olympics, Paralympics 'net cost' drops to 2.8bn euros: think tank
-
Chile president-elect dials down right-wing rhetoric, vows unity
-
Five Rob Reiner films that rocked, romanced and riveted
-
Rob Reiner: Hollywood giant and political activist
Duminil-Copin, Fields-winning mathematician with 'aesthetic vision'
Hugo Duminil-Copin, a French mathematician whose visual approach helped him win the world's most prestigious mathematics prize the Fields Medal on Tuesday, said he "doesn't really fit into the cliches of a genius".
The 36-year-old, who has a messy head of hair and bright eyes beaming from behind glasses, told AFP that he is a "very, very normal person" who loves sport, his family and quiet moments of reflection.
But for Duminil-Copin, who specialises in probability theory, those quiet moments can lead to discoveries that won him the Fields Medal, the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for mathematics.
He accepted the prize, which is awarded every four years to mathematicians under 40, at a ceremony in Finland's capital Helsinki.
The other winners were Britain's James Maynard of Oxford University, June Huh of Princeton in the United States and Ukraine's Maryna Viazovska, who is only the second ever woman laureate.
Duminil-Copin described with unabashed enthusiasm the happiness he finds in working with others in the search for answers -- whether or not they find one.
"It's the best, especially since it's a collective process, where all the beauty is in interacting with others," he said in an interview a few days before the prize was announced.
- A visual mind -
Born on August 26, 1985, Duminil-Copin has collected a raft of mathematics awards over the last decade.
At the age of 31, he was appointed professor at France's Institute of Advanced Scientific Studies in 2016.
"It's a place that seems made for me, for my creative part," he said of the green campus outside Paris.
It gives the mathematician that most precious resource for deep thinkers: time.
"This slowness in everyday life is very fruitful because I need time for ideas to come, for them to settle quietly, for them to take shape," he said.
At the campus, which is not far from where he grew up, Duminil-Copin uses his "very visual intuition" to take on the most complicated mathematical problems.
"There are very few formulas and many drawings" in his mind when he thinks about such problems, he said.
That "aesthetic vision" allows him to view mathematics with a "certain elegance", he added.
The Paris institute allows researchers to free themselves of all other obligations, including teaching.
But Duminil-Copin teaches anyway, retaining a professorship at the University of Geneva, saying that "in the end it is perhaps the most important aspect of this profession".
He may have inherited this passion from his father, a sports teacher, and mother, a dancer who became a teacher later in life.
When he was younger, Duminil-Copin envisioned becoming a teacher himself -- of maths, of course -- but his talent propelled him towards research.
Collaboration is at the heart of his outlook. If he provides mathematical tools to physicists, their work in turn may allow someone else in the future to find new applications for them.
"It's the whole community that really produces scientific progress," he said.
- Mental balance -
Duminil-Copin hailed the importance of two university professors to his career, Jean-Francois Le Gall, who also worked on probability theory, and fellow Fields Medal winner Wendelin Werner.
He said he fell in "love at first sight" with percolation theory during a class Werner taught on the subject, which falls under the branch of statistical physics.
It was in that class that Duminil-Copin first encountered Nienhuis's conjecture -- a "beautiful, elegant and completely mysterious" problem, he said.
"I solved it a few years later, almost without doing it on purpose."
As a child, Duminil-Copin preferred astronomy to mathematics.
He said he was "not pushed at all" by his parents to focus solely on his studies -- instead they were keen to "confront him with a variety of things" such as sport, music and friends.
The lesson seems to have stuck.
"When we talk about preparing to become a researcher we think of intelligence, academic training, but there is also a mental balance which is very important," he said.
New ideas can strike him "anytime, in the middle of the night or in the shower", he said.
But they will have to wait until he's back at work.
"My priority is on the personal side, to spend time with my daughter and my wife."
W.AbuLaban--SF-PST