Partners
Collaborating with universities, institutes, and industry
Mathesis partners
The school is built through university hosts, national partners, and research collaborations.
The Lie-Størmer Center is a collaborative initiative between the Universities of Tromsø and Bergen, serving as a national nucleus for mathematicians throughout Norway. Partner universities include the major Norwegian institutions in Oslo, Stavanger, and Trondheim. International partnerships extend through the European Research Centers on Mathematics (ERCOM) network and CIMPA, with planned collaboration with the Indian National Center for Mathematics through the Indo-Norwegian Cooperation Programme in Higher Education.
Host institutions
Host universities give the school its academic base and link Mathesis to doctoral training across Norway.
UiT – The Arctic University of Norway
Host institution at 69°N providing administrative, academic, and infrastructural support for the Center's Tromsø node
University of Bergen
Host institution providing the Center's Bergen node with shared governance, research collaboration, and access to the broader Norwegian mathematical community
National partners
Partner universities broaden the course catalogue and connect students to supervisors and peers across the country.
University of Oslo
National partner institution participating in the Pure Mathematics network and collaborating on research programs and doctoral training initiatives
NTNU Trondheim
National partner institution collaborating through the Pure Mathematics network with joint research initiatives and graduate student exchanges
University of Stavanger
National partner with research strengths in algebraic geometry, complex analysis, differential equations, and mathematical physics through its Department of Mathematics and Physics
Research institutes
Collaborative projects, applied environments, and national research infrastructure.
Centre for Advanced Study (CAS)
Research collaboration partner at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, hosting thematic research groups and fostering interdisciplinary dialogue
SFI Visual Intelligence
Research collaboration partner exploring connections between computational mathematics and visual intelligence through machine learning and geometric methods
SINTEF
One of Europe's largest independent research institutes, developing numerical algorithms and computational methods for complex physical systems with strong industry partnerships
Simula Research Laboratory
Non-profit research laboratory specializing in scientific computing, PDE solvers, and computational methods for biomedical applications including the FEniCS finite element project
Work with Mathesis
Companies, research institutes, and public-sector organizations can connect with PhD candidates, supervisors, and the national academic network.