AUC Student Excels in the Annual Mathematical Association Of America (MAA) Mathfest Conference
Muhammad El Gebali, electronics engineering and mathematics senior at The American University in Cairo (AUC) was presented with the Outstanding Presentation Award for his research paper titled “The Combinatorial Interpretation of the LDU Decomposition of Totally Positive Matrices in the annual Mathematical Association of America (MAA) Mathfest conference, which took place in Washington, DC. El Gebali, the first AUC student to participate in the MAA Mathfest, also joined students from South Carolina and De Sales University to solve math challenges, and his team ranked first place in the event competition with 102.5 points out of 103. The MAA Mathfest conference brings together undergraduate and graduate students, who are selectively chosen to present their research work and solve mathematical problems using calculus, algebraic and geometric operations. “I was chosen among 140 undergraduate presentations made by more than 200 students, mostly from universities across the United States,” said El Gebali. “It’s a positive feeling that can’t be described and an achievement that I wasn’t expecting.”When Muhammad El Gebali, electronics engineering and mathematics senior, was in high school, he discovered his passion for mathematics after taking calculus classes. He came to AUC eager to broaden his knowledge and challenge his learning capabilities.
El Gebali’s ambition to succeed and become successful is evident through his leadership roles at AUC. He is currently the technical director of the Robotics Club and the development director for Khatwa, a community-based student club that promotes science and technology knowledge to individuals from underprivileged parts of Cairo. He is also a member of the Electronics and Communications Engineering Association, and was a project manager for the Community of Scientific and Technological Activities student conference last year.
El Gebali’s choice to attend the conference was inspired by his strong desire and keen interest to challenge himself. “I get frustrated if I don’t challenge my knowledge,” he said. “What I love about mathematics is that it’s a path [where] you reach from one fact to another,” he said.
Nermine El Sissi, assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics and Actuarial Science who has been supervising El Gebali’s award-winning research, testifies to El Gebali’s dedication and enthusiasm for math. “Muhammad’s passion for mathematics is the catalyst for producing original research work in this field of study,” she declared. “Attending his presentation made me realize that mathematics is a language at which he is fluent. His talk was vivid, and everyone at the presentation was attentive and interested. It has been a great pleasure to work with such a talented, determined undergraduate student who is able to conduct research in a professional and pleasant manner."
At the MAA Mathfest conference, El Gebali was commended for his exceptional talent at mathematics and was encouraged to apply for different scholarships to attend graduate school in the United States. And that’s what El Gebali plans to do. His aim is to attend graduate school in the United States or Canada, and become a professor. “I would like to have a research position at a university,” he said. “I also recently discovered that I’m interested in philosophy, so who knows what field of study I will choose to follow in my career.”