Fan Chung

Fan Chung
金芳蓉
Fan Chung in 1987
Born (1949-10-09) October 9, 1949 (age 75)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materNational Taiwan University (BS)
University of Pennsylvania (MS, PhD)
Known forSpectral graph theory
extremal graph theory
Random graphs
Spouse
(m. 1983; died 2020)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Pennsylvania
University of California, San Diego
Doctoral advisorHerbert Wilf
Doctoral studentsSteve Butler
Sinan Aksoy
Josh Tobin
Olivia Simpson
Mark Kempton
Franklin Kenter
Jake Hughes
Mary Radcliffe
Wenbo Zhao
Alexander Tsiatas
Shoaib Jamall
Paul Horn
Reid Andersen
Ross Richardson
Joshua Cooper
Robert Ellis
Lincoln Linyuan Lu
Chao Yang

Fan-Rong King Chung Graham (Chinese: 金芳蓉; pinyin: Jīn Fāngróng; born October 9, 1949), known professionally as Fan Chung, is a Taiwanese-born American mathematician who works mainly in the areas of spectral graph theory, extremal graph theory and random graphs, in particular in generalizing the Erdős–Rényi model for graphs with general degree distribution (including power-law graphs in the study of large information networks).

Since 1998, Chung has been the Paul Erdős Professor in Combinatorics at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). She received her doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania in 1974, under the direction of Herbert Wilf. After working at Bell Laboratories and Bellcore for nineteen years, she joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania as the first female tenured professor in mathematics. She serves on the editorial boards of more than a dozen international journals. Since 2003 she has been the editor-in-chief of Internet Mathematics. She has been invited to give lectures at many conferences, including the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1994 and a plenary lecture on the mathematics of PageRank at the 2008 Annual meeting of the American Mathematical Society. She was selected to be a Noether Lecturer in 2009. In 2024, she was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences.[1]

  1. ^ "Nine mathematicians elected to National Academy of Sciences". American Mathematical Society. April 30, 2024.