The Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (National Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics) is considered to be the foremost research and educational institution of Brazil in the area of mathematics. It is located in the city of Rio de Janeiro, and was formerly known simply as Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (IMPA), whose abbreviation remains in use.

It is a research and education institution qualified as a Social Organization (SO) under the auspices of the Ministry of Science, Technology, Innovations and Communications (MCTIC) and the Ministry of Education (MEC) of Brazil. Currently located in the Jardim Botânico neighborhood (South Zone) of Rio de Janeiro. IMPA was founded on October 15, 1952. It was the first research unit of the National Research Council (CNPq), a federal funding agency created a year earlier. Its logo is a stylized Möbius strip, reproducing a large sculpture of a Möbius strip on display within the IMPA headquarters.

Founded by Lélio Gama, Leopoldo Nachbin and Maurício Peixoto, IMPA's primary mission is to stimulate scientific research, the training of new researchers and the dissemination and improvement of mathematical culture in Brazil. Mathematical knowledge is fundamental for scientific and technological development, which are indispensable components for economic, social and human progress.

thumb|upright|Postage stamp commemorating the 6th Brazilian Mathematics Colloquium, held at IMPA in 1967

Gama's performance at the helm of IMPA played a crucial role in the creation and consolidation of the young institute. And Nachbin and Peixoto would later be the first Brazilians invited to lecture at the International Congress of Mathematicians, one of the greatest distinctions in a mathematician's career. The academic prestige of IMPA grew from 1957, with the organization of the first Brazilian Colloquium of Mathematics, with about 50 participants. The Colloquium has been taking place every two years since then, in an uninterrupted fashion. In 1957 IMPA moved to Rua São Clemente, in Botafogo, also in the South Zone of Rio. In 1967, IMPA moved again to a historic building on Luiz de Camões street, in the center of Rio de Janeiro, which currently houses the Hélio Oiticica Cultural Center. In 1981 under the direction of Lindolpho de Carvalho Dias IMPA inaugurated its current headquarters in the neighborhood of Jardim Botânico.

In 1971, IMPA became the first mathematical institution in Brazil with a mandate from the Federal Council of Education to award master's and doctoral degrees. The novelty allowed the Master's and PhD program to become a permanent activity. Since then, IMPA's academic postgraduate program has always been awarded the highest grades by the Coordination for Improvement of Higher Level Staff (Capes).

Mathematician Jacob Palis was elected director in 1993. He would hold the position for ten years, a period of remarkable growth in IMPA's international prestige.

In 2011, IMPA became a founding member of the network of higher education institutions that perform the Professional Master's in Mathematics (PROFMAT). This is a semi-presential postgraduate program aimed at training the basic education math teacher, coordinated by SBM with the support of IMPA.

International cooperation

In 1995, IMPA hosted the international meeting that created the Mathematical Union for Latin America and the Caribbean. In 2011, it once again hosted the creation of an international mathematical organization: the Mathematical Council of the Americas.

In 2004, IMPA signed a contract with the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), France's leading scientific funding agency. The agreement qualified IMPA as a Unité Mixte Internationale (UMI, International Joint Unit). This opened the possibility for the best French mathematicians to spend long-term periods at IMPA, at no cost to the institute. The contract has been renewed every four years.

From 2016, UMI was renamed after Jean-Christophe Yoccoz, the 1994 Fields Medalist, honorary researcher and long time collaborator and friend of IMPA.

In 2014, Brazilian mathematician Artur Avila, a researcher and former doctoral student at IMPA, won the Fields Medal, the most prestigious distinction in world mathematics. In the same year, IMPA was honored with the right to organize two major events in the world mathematical calendar: the 2017 International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) and the 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM), both in Rio de Janeiro.

In 2016, following an initiative originated from IMPA, the Brazilian Parliament formally proclaimed the Mathematical Biennium (Law 13.358), which dedicated the years 2017 and 2018 to the cause of mathematics, marking the realization in the country of the IMO 2017 and the ICM 2018. The Mathematical Biennium period represented an enormous effort by IMPA to bring mathematics closer to the Brazilian society through initiatives such as the National Mathematics Festival, held in 2017.

In 2018, IMPA and SBM led Brazil's successful bid to join Group 5, the elite group of the International Mathematical Union, along with the other ten most advanced nations in the area. In that year, the cornerstone of IMPA's new campus was laid on land adjacent to the one the institute occupies in Jardim Botânico, donated four years earlier by private sponsors. The new campus will allow for the expansion of IMPA's activities and of its contribution to science and education in Brazil.

thumb|IMPA entrance

People associated with IMPA

Artur Avila, a 2014 Fields Medalist, is a researcher at IMPA and received his Ph.D. there. Among its researchers also are/were Jacob Palis, Elon Lages Lima, Jean-Christophe Yoccoz, Stephen Smale, Maurício Peixoto, Manfredo do Carmo, Marcelo Viana, Welington de Melo, Enrique Pujals, Harold Rosenberg, Marcos Dajczer, Carlos Gustavo Moreira, Fernando Codá Marques, César Camacho, Arnaldo Garcia, Alfredo Noel Iusem, Karl-Otto Stöhr, Robert Morris, and Carolina Araujo.

{| class="wikitable"

|-

!Nº||Director!!Period

|-

|align="center"|1||Lélio Gama||1952–1966

|-

|align="center"|2||Lindolpho de Carvalho Dias||1966–1969

|-

|align="center"|3||Elon Lages Lima||1969–1971

|-

|align="center"|4||Lindolpho de Carvalho Dias||1971–1978

|-

|align="center"|5||Elon Lages Lima||1978–1979

|-

|align="center"|6||Lindolpho de Carvalho Dias||1979–1989

|-

|align="center"|7||Elon Lages Lima||1989–1993

|-

|align="center"|8||Jacob Palis||1993–2003

|-

|align="center"|9||César Camacho||2003–2015

|-

|10

|Marcelo Viana

|2015-

|}

See also

  • People associated with IMPA
  • Sociedade Brasileira de Matemática
  • Pure mathematics
  • Maria Laura Moura Mouzinho Leite Lopes
  • Cândido Lima da Silva Dias

References

  • IMPA - Instituto Nacional de Matemática Pura e Aplicada (official website)