Nina Snaith
Nina Claire Snaith is a British mathematician at the University of Bristol working in random matrix theory and quantum chaos.
In 1998, she and her then adviser Jonathan Keating conjectured a value for the leading coefficient of the asymptotics of the moments of the Riemann zeta function. Keating and Snaith's guessed value for the constant was based on random-matrix theory, following a trend that started with Montgomery's pair correlation conjecture. Keating's and Snaith's work extended works[1] by works by Conrey, Ghosh and Gonek, also conjectural, based on number theoretic heuristics; Conrey, Farmer, Keating, Rubinstein, and Snaith later conjectured the lower terms in the asymptotics of the moments. Snaith's work appeared in her doctoral thesis Random Matrix Theory and zeta functions.[2]
Nina Snaith is the sister of mathematician and musician Daniel Snaith, better known as Caribou.
References
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- ↑ Nina Claire Snaith, Mathematical Genealogy Project
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