Oxford Mathematician Andreas Bode talks about his work in representation theory and its lesson for the interconnectness of mathematics.
15:45
From PDEs to groups
Abstract
We present a construction which associates to a KdV equation the lamplighter group.
In order to establish this relation we use automata and random walks on ultra discrete limits.
It is also related to the L2 Betti numbers introduced by Atiyah which are homotopy
invariants of closed manifolds.
15:45
Orthogonal group and higher categorical adjoints
Abstract
In this talk I will articulate and contextualize the following sequence of results.
The Bruhat decomposition of the general linear group defines a stratification of the orthogonal group.
Matrix multiplication defines an algebra structure on its exit-path category in a certain Morita category of categories.
In this Morita category, this algebra acts on the category of n-categories -- this action is given by adjoining adjoints to n-categories.
This result is extracted from a larger program -- entirely joint with John Francis, some parts joint with Nick Rozenblyum -- which proves the cobordism hypothesis.
16:00
Introduction to Bounded Cohomology
Abstract
In 1982, Gromov introduced bounded cohomology to give estimates on the minimal volume of manifolds. Since then, bounded cohomology has become an independent and active research field. In this talk I will give an introduction to bounded cohomology, state many open problems and relate it to other fields.
16:00
Haken's algorithm for recognising the unknot
Abstract
I will discuss the basics of normal surface theory, and how they were used to give an algorithm for deciding whether a given diagram represents the unknot. This version is primarily based on Haken's work, with simplifications from Schubert and Jaco-Oertel.
Lang-Vojta conjecture over function fields for surfaces dominating tori
Abstract
The celebrated Lang-Vojta Conjecture predicts degeneracy of S-integral points on varieties of log general type defined over number fields. It admits a geometric analogue over function fields, where stronger results have been obtained applying a method developed by Corvaja and Zannier. In this talk, we present a recent result for non-isotrivial surfaces over function fields dominating a two-dimensional torus. This extends Corvaja and Zannier’s result in the isotrivial case and it is based on a refinement of gcd estimates for polynomials evaluated at S-units. This is a joint work with A. Turchet.
The eigencurve at Eisenstein weight one points
Abstract
In 1973, Serre observed that the Hecke eigenvalues of Eisenstein series can be p-adically interpolated. In other words, Eisenstein series can be viewed as specializations of a p-adic family parametrized by the weight. The notion of p-adic variations of modular forms was later generalized by Hida to include families of ordinary cuspforms. In 1998, Coleman and Mazur defined the eigencurve, a rigid analytic space classifying much more general p-adic families of Hecke eigenforms parametrized by the weight. The local nature of the eigencurve is well-understood at points corresponding to cuspforms of weight k ≥ 2, while the weight one case is far more intricate.
In this talk, we discuss the geometry of the eigencurve at weight one Eisenstein points. Our approach consists in studying the deformation rings of certain (deceptively simple!) Artin representations. Via this Galois-theoretic method, we obtain the q-expansion of some non-classical overconvergent forms in terms of p-adic logarithms of p-units in certain number field. Finally, we will explain how these calculations suggest a different approach to the Gross-Stark conjecture.
Potential automorphy over CM fields and the Ramanujan conjecture
Abstract
I will give an overview of some recent progress on potential automorphy results over CM fields, that is joint work with Allen, Calegari, Gee, Helm, Le Hung, Newton, Scholze, Taylor, and Thorne. I will focus on explaining an application to the generalized Ramanujan-Petersson conjecture.
Indivisibility and divisibility of class numbers of imaginary quadratic fields
Abstract
For any prime p > 3, the strongest lower bounds for the number of imaginary quadratic fields with discriminant down down to -X for which the class group has trivial (non-trivial) p-torsion are due to Kohnen and Ono (Soundararajan). I will discuss recent refinements of these classic results in which we consider the imaginary quadratic fields whose class number is indivisible (divisible) by p such that a given finite set of primes factor in a prescribed way. We prove a lower bound for the number of such fields with discriminant down to -X which is of the same order of magnitude as Kohnen and Ono's (Soundararajan's) results. For the indivisibility case, we rely on a result of Wiles establishing the existence of imaginary quadratic fields with trivial p-torsion in their class groups satisfying almost any given finite set of local conditions, and a result of Zagier which says that the Hurwitz class numbers are the Fourier coefficients of a mock modular form.