Aloha! My name
is Marissa Loving and I’m incoming mathematics PhD student here at UIUC. I hail from Hawaii where I was born, raised,
and attended college. I am a bit out of
my comfort zone here in the Midwest, but so far it has been smooth sailing. Perhaps I should use a different expression now that I'm surrounded by fields of crops rather than the Pacific Ocean. I’m quite excited to be
part of SPI since this is the first research program I've participated in that wasn’t composed purely of STEM, if not solely math, students. I love my math, but it’s wonderful to get fresh
perspectives from people in English, psychology, or library sciences, just to
name a few.
I first became interested in math research during my
freshmen year of college while taking an introductory topology course. Topology was my first proof-based math course
and I enjoyed the flexibility that proofs gave me in constructing solutions to
problems compared to the fairly singular method of problem solving employed in
algebra, trigonometry, or calculus. The other
thing I really enjoyed about topology was the way we formalized an everyday
concept, the distance between two points, to create an abstract structure, a metric space. We then took
another step into abstraction by considering how we could maintain the concept
of distance or “close together-ness” that was available to us in a metric
space, but without the use of a metric.
Ultimately, this led us to the idea of a topological space. I apologize if it seems as though I’m turning
this post into a math lecture, but the process I'm attempting to illustrate, that of taking a very mundane concept
and abstracting it into an extremely general structure that can then be studied
and understood, is what really drew my attention to the possibility of
researching mathematics and led me to my first real research experience
during an undergraduate summer program at the California Institute of
Technology. My project was in the area
of spectral geometry, which stems from the intersection of mathematics and
theoretical physics, and it really fascinated me.
It was a combination of this experience and my enjoyment of my courses in analysis and topology that have fueled a growing interest in geometric analysis and topology and I am hoping to do my doctoral research in one of these areas. However, as an undergraduate I only had limited or, in some instances, no exposure to many of the diverse research areas present in mathematics. As a result, it is quite possible that there are other fields of mathematics that I would enjoy even more than geometry or topology. I decided to use this summer as an opportunity to broaden my horizons by participating in a research project in the area of Mathematical Logic and its application to other fields of mathematics such as fractal geometry. My research advisor is currently out of town so I can’t speak to the specifics of my project just yet, although I’m looking forward to sharing them with you later in the summer.
It was a combination of this experience and my enjoyment of my courses in analysis and topology that have fueled a growing interest in geometric analysis and topology and I am hoping to do my doctoral research in one of these areas. However, as an undergraduate I only had limited or, in some instances, no exposure to many of the diverse research areas present in mathematics. As a result, it is quite possible that there are other fields of mathematics that I would enjoy even more than geometry or topology. I decided to use this summer as an opportunity to broaden my horizons by participating in a research project in the area of Mathematical Logic and its application to other fields of mathematics such as fractal geometry. My research advisor is currently out of town so I can’t speak to the specifics of my project just yet, although I’m looking forward to sharing them with you later in the summer.
Hello Marissa!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your post. It's great that you are still open to researching new fields in math and it seems your advisor supports this. Good luck with your research and hope we get to talk later on.