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Mark Embree was awarded Man of the Year and Outstanding Student in the College of Arts and Sciences at [[Virginia Tech]] in 1996. He was also a [[Rhodes Scholar]] at the University of Oxford, where he completed his doctorate.
Mark Embree was awarded Man of the Year and Outstanding Student in the College of Arts and Sciences at [[Virginia Tech]] in 1996. He was also a [[Rhodes Scholar]] at the University of Oxford, where he completed his doctorate.


== Early Life ==
== Early life ==


Mark Embree attended [[Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology]].<ref>{{cite news | date = December 11, 1995 | title = Rhodes Scholarships Go To Four With D.C. or VA. Ties | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1995/12/11/rhodes-scholarships-go-to-four-people-with-dc-or-va-ties/6790e84a-9f4b-4f54-8b12-a416e6591fb2/ | newspaper = The Washington Post}}</ref>
Mark Embree attended [[Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology]].<ref>{{cite news | date = December 11, 1995 | title = Rhodes Scholarships Go To Four With D.C. or VA. Ties | url = https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1995/12/11/rhodes-scholarships-go-to-four-people-with-dc-or-va-ties/6790e84a-9f4b-4f54-8b12-a416e6591fb2/ | newspaper = The Washington Post}}</ref>

Revision as of 16:34, 21 December 2022

Mark Embree
NationalityVereinigte Staaten American
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
Virginia Tech
Known forKrylov subspace methods, non-normal operators and spectral perturbation theory, Toeplitz matrices, random matrices, and damped wave operators
AwardsMan of the Year and Outstanding Student in the College of Arts and Sciences at Virginia Tech (1996)
Rhodes Scholar (1996)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematician
InstitutionsRice University
Doctoral advisorAndrew Wathen
Websitehttp://www.math.vt.edu/people/embree/

Mark Embree is professor of computational and applied mathematics [1] at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia. Until 2013, he was a professor of computational and applied mathematics at Rice University in Houston, Texas.

Mark Embree was awarded Man of the Year and Outstanding Student in the College of Arts and Sciences at Virginia Tech in 1996. He was also a Rhodes Scholar at the University of Oxford, where he completed his doctorate.

Early life

Mark Embree attended Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology.[1]

Forschung

His main research interests are Krylov subspace methods, non-normal operators and spectral perturbation theory, Toeplitz matrices, random matrices, and damped wave operators.

Books

Dr Mark Embree wrote a book with Lloyd N. Trefethen titled Spectra and Pseudospectra: The Behavior of Nonnormal Matrices and Operators.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rhodes Scholarships Go To Four With D.C. or VA. Ties". The Washington Post. December 11, 1995.