Aleksandr Khazanov
Missing Russian-American mathematician
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aleksandr Leonidovich Khazanov (May 4, 1979 – disappeared June 10, 2001) is a Russian American mathematician. A child prodigy, he wrote a perfect paper at the International Mathematical Olympiad 1994,[1] one of the youngest ever to do so. Khazanov was reported missing in June 2001.[2] He suffered from depression or bipolar disorder at the time of his disappearance.
May 4, 1979
Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, United States
Aleksandr Khazanov | |
|---|---|
![]() Khazanov in 1995 | |
| Born | Aleksandr Leonidovich Khazanov May 4, 1979 |
| Disappeared | June 10, 2001 (aged 22) Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, United States |
| Status | Missing for 24 years, 11 months and 11 days |
| Father | Leonid Khazanov |
Biography
Born to Anna and Leonid Khazanov, a math professor, Aleksandr had attended a special school for math students several years older in Leningrad, Soviet Union (now Saint Petersburg, Russia), before his family fled antisemitic threats and moved to Brooklyn, New York, United States as refugees in 1992. He attended Stuyvesant High School and showed his exceptional talent in mathematics. In the summer of 1994, he passed qualifying exams for Penn State University's doctoral program in math, and he was the youngest member on the United States team for the International Mathematical Olympiad of which all six members received perfect scores. In the following year, he was named a finalist and eventually placed 7th at the 54th Westinghouse Science Talent Search for a paper dealing with a variant of Fermat's Last Theorem, mentored by Leonid Vaserstein, a math professor at Penn State University, and also from Russia.[3][4] He represented the United States for the second time in the 1995 International Mathematical Olympiad, and he entered the PhD math program at Penn State University right after high school in fall 1995.[5][6]
