,
Martin Hairer (at back),
Maryam Mirzakhani, with Maryam's daughter Anahita) and Bhargava at the ICM 2014 in Seoul Bhargava has won several awards for his research, the most prestigious being the
Fields Medal, the highest award in the field of mathematics, which he won in 2014. He received the
Morgan Prize in 1996. and
Hertz Fellowship He was named one of
Popular Science magazine's "Brilliant 10" in November 2002. He then received a
Clay 5-year Research Fellowship and the Merten M. Hasse Prize from the
MAA in 2003, the
Clay Research Award, the
SASTRA Ramanujan Prize, and the Leonard M. and Eleanor B. Blumenthal Award for the Advancement of Research in Pure Mathematics in 2005.
Peter Sarnak of
Princeton University has said of Bhargava: In 2008, Bhargava was awarded the
American Mathematical Society's
Cole Prize. The citation reads: In 2009, he was awarded the Face of the Future award at the India Abroad Person of the Year ceremony in New York City. In 2014, the same publication gave the India Abroad Publisher's Prize for Special Excellence. In 2011, he was awarded the
Fermat Prize for "various generalizations of the Davenport-Heilbronn estimates and for his startling recent results (with Arul Shankar) on the average rank of elliptic curves". In 2012, Bhargava was named an inaugural recipient of the Simons Investigator Award, and became a fellow of the
American Mathematical Society in its inaugural class of fellows. He was awarded the 2012
Infosys Prize in mathematics for his "extraordinarily original work in
algebraic number theory, which has revolutionized the way in which
number fields and
elliptic curves are counted". In 2014, Bhargava was awarded the
Fields Medal at the
International Congress of Mathematicians in
Seoul In 2015, he was awarded the
Padma Bhushan, the third-highest civilian award of India. In 2017, Bhargava was elected as a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2018, Bhargava was named as the inaugural occupant of The Distinguished Chair for the Public Dissemination of Mathematics at The
National Museum of Mathematics (MoMath). This is the first visiting professorship in the United States dedicated exclusively to raising public awareness of mathematics. Bhargava was conferred a Fellowship at the Royal Society in 2019. ==Selected publications==