Seminar series
Date
Thu, 20 Jul 2023
18:00
Location
Lecture Theatre 1
Speaker
Various

Further Information

The theory of tilings in the plane touches on diverse areas of mathematics, physics and beyond. Aperiodic sets of tiles, such as the famous Penrose tiling that you see as you walk into the Mathematical Institute, admit tilings of the plane without any translational symmetry. The Penrose tiling is made of two elementary shapes, or tiles, and mathematicians have long wondered about the existence of a single tile that could tile the plane aperiodically. Earlier this year such a shape was discovered: the hat! This hat turned out to be the first of a whole family, and is being celebrated across a two-day meeting in Oxford.

For this public talk, organised in partnership with the Clay Mathematics Institute, Chaim Goodman-Strauss (National Museum of Mathematics/University of Arkansas), one of the authors of this new work, will give an overview of the hat.

This will be followed by a panel discussion featuring Craig Kaplan (University of Waterloo), Marjorie Senechal (Smith College) and Roger Penrose (University of Oxford) as well as Chaim Goodman-Strauss. The discussion, about the impact of this new discovery and future directions will be chaired by Henna Koivusalo (University of Bristol).

Register The whole programme on 20th July will be highly accessible, so please do come along earlier if you can.

Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Last updated on 15 Jul 2023 20:02.