Lan-Hsuan Huang (Chinese: 黃籃萱) is a Taiwanese-American mathematician and mathematical physicist specializing in differential geometry, geometric analysis, and their applications in the theory of relativity.
Huang majored in mathematics at National Taiwan University, graduating in 2004.
[2] She went to Stanford University for graduate study in mathematics, and completed her Ph.D. there in 2009.
Her doctoral dissertation, Center of Mass and Constant Mean Curvature Foliations for Isolated Systems, was supervised by Richard Schoen.
[2][3] After three years at Columbia University as Joseph F. Ritt Assistant Professor of Mathematics, she obtained a tenure-track position as assistant professor of mathematics at the University of Connecticut in 2012.