A 1983 graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he received the PhD from the
University of California, Berkeley in 1988 under the direction of
Clifford Taubes and
Robion Kirby. He joined the MIT mathematics faculty as professor in 1996, following faculty appointments at
Stanford University and at the
California Institute of Technology (professor 1994–96). At MIT, he was the Simons Professor of Mathematics from 2007–2010. Upon Isadore Singer's retirement in 2010 the name of the chair became the Singer Professor of Mathematics which Mrowka held until 2017. He was named head of the Department of Mathematics in 2014 and held that position for 3 years. A prior
Sloan fellow and Young Presidential Investigator, in 1994 he was an
invited speaker at the
International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in
Zurich. In 2007, he received the
Oswald Veblen Prize in Geometry from the
AMS jointly with
Peter Kronheimer, "for their joint contributions to both three- and four-dimensional
topology through the development of deep analytical techniques and applications." He was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 2010, and in 2011 he received the
Doob Prize with
Peter B. Kronheimer for their book
Monopoles and Three-Manifolds (
Cambridge University Press, 2007). In 2018 he gave a plenary lecture at the ICM in
Rio de Janeiro, together with Peter Kronheimer. In 2023 he was awarded the
Leroy P. Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research (with Peter Kronheimer). He became a fellow of the
American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2007, and a member of the
National Academy of Sciences in 2015. == Research ==