Qiaochu Yuan
Office: 1097 Evans Hall
Office Hours (Spring 2018): W 12:30-3:30
Email: qchu[at]math[dot]berkeley[dot]edu
I am a sixth-year graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley. (Note that there is another graduate student of the same name here.) My advisor is
David Nadler.
Teaching
Spring 2018: Math 110 Linear Algebra (Frenkel).
Course website.
Fall 2017: Math 55 Discrete Mathematics (Holtz).
Section website (last updated 8/27/17).
Spring 2016: Math 54 Linear Algebra and Differential Equations (Yuan).
Course website,
section website (last updated 2/19/16).
Fall 2015: Math 54 Linear Algebra and Differential Equations (Nadler).
Course website,
section website (last updated 11/11/15)
Spring 2014: Math 1B Calculus (Reshetikhin).
Course website,
section website (last updated 4/23/14)
Fall 2013: Math 1A Calculus (Steel).
Course website,
section website (last updated 12/10/13)
Classes, Seminars, and Conferences
Notes are unedited. Any errors introduced are mine.
Spring 2016:
Spring 2015:
Fall 2014:
Summer 2014:
- West Coast Algebraic Topology Summer School: Topological Field Theories (Ayala, Blumberg, Francis, Freed, Gwilliam, Poirier, Schommer-Pries, Adem, Cohen, Sinha). Syllabus, notes and problem sets
Spring 2014:
Fall 2013:
Spring 2013:
Fall 2012:
- Math 253 Homological Algebra (Wodzicki). Notes (last updated 11/18/12)
- Math 274 The Geometry and Algebra of Curves on Surfaces (Thurston). Notes (last updated 1/14/13)
- Math 275 Quantum Field Theory (Reshetikhin). Notes (last updated 11/18/12)
History
On December 6th, 2013, I passed my qualifying exam. Here is my
syllabus and transcript.
In the summer of 2013 I was an instructor at the
Summer Program for Applied Rationality and Cognition.
In the summer of 2012 I was a counselor at the
Program in Mathematics for Young Scientists (PROMYS), where I had previously been a student in the summer of 2006.
I graduated from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.Sc. in Mathematics) in February 2012. From September 2010 to April 2011 I also studied abroad at the
University of Cambridge (
Part II of the Mathematical Tripos) through the
Cambridge-MIT Exchange.