Conversations 
  in Science
  for 
  K-12 Educators
A program conceived and organized by the Wisconsin Initiative for Science Literacy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with the collaboration of the Madison Metropolitan School District and the Edgewood Sonderegger Science Center.
The Number Theory of Partitions
Ken Ono
  Manasse Professor of Letters and Science, University of Wisconsin - Madison
ABOUT THE CONVERSATION
  Therefore, there are 5 partitions of the number 4. But (as happens in Number 
  Theory) the seemingly simple business of counting the ways to break a number 
  into parts leads quickly to some difficult and beautiful problems. Partitions 
  play important roles in such diverse areas of mathematics such as combinatorics, 
  Lie Theory, Representation Theory, Mathematical Physics, and the theory of Special 
  Functions, but we shall concentrate on their role in Number Theory. We shall 
  give an account of the impact of Leonhard Euler, Freeman Dyson, and Srinivasa 
  Ramanujan on the subject, and describe some of the recent advances in the subject.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
  Ken Ono is the Solle P. and Margaret Manasse Professor of Letters and Science 
  at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. After receiving his PhD in 1993 from 
  UCLA, Ono held positions at the University of Illinois and the University of 
  Georgia. He was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study for two years before 
  moving to Penn State University, where he earned the title of Louis J. Martarano 
  Professor of Mathematics before moving to Wisconsin. Since 1994, Ono has authored 
  or co-authored 105 papers on Number Theory and related topics, and he has written 
  four books. He is an editor of eight professional journals. Ono has distinguished 
  himself by winning many of the most prestigious awards available to scientists 
  in this country. He has received the NSF CAREER award, an Alfred P. Sloan Research 
  Fellowship, the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers 
  from President Clinton, a David and Lucille Packard Research Fellowslhip, an 
  H.I. Romnes Fellowship, and a John S. Guggenheim Fellowship. Last year in a 
  ceremony at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington D.C., Ono was awarded 
  the National Science Foundation Director’s Distinguished Teaching Scholar 
  Award, the highest honor bestowed by the NSF for excellence in research and 
  education.