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  1. Welcome! I am a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University's Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications . I completed my PhD at the Einstein Institute of Mathematics and the Federmann Center for the Study of Rationality at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

  2. Jan 21, 2022 · Michael Simkin, a postdoctoral fellow at the Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications, calculated that there are about (0.143n) n ways the queens can be placed so none are attacking each other on giant n-by-n chessboards.

  3. Jan 25, 2022 · In July 2021, one such challenge was finally solved – at least, up to a point. Mathematician Michael Simkin, from Harvard University in Massachusetts, put his mind to the n-queens problem that has been puzzling experts since it was first imagined in the 1840s.

  4. Curriculum Vitae, Michael Simkin, 3 Discrete Mathematics Seminar, Princeton University, October 2018. Students Combinatorics Day, Bar Ilan University, July 2018.

  5. Michael Simkin, post-doctoral fellow at Harvard’s CMSA, has an answer for the 150-year-old chess-based n-queens problem. An article on the n-queens problem and its answer is in The Harvard Gazette. The paper “The number of n-queens configurations” is available on arXiv.org.

  6. www.quantamagazine.org › mathematician-answersQuanta Magazine

    Sep 21, 2021 · It is the earliest version of a mathematical question called the n-queens problem whose solution Michael Simkin, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University’s Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications, zeroed in on in a paper posted in July.

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  8. Michael Simkin is an instructor of applied mathematics at the MIT math department. Previously, he was a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University's Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications. He earned his PhD at Hebrew University, where he was advised by Nati Linial.

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