14:00
Degenerate Representations of GL_n over a p-adic field
Abstract
Smooth generic representations of $GL_n$ over a $p$-adic field $F$, i.e. representations admitting a nondegenerate Whittaker model, are an important class of representations, for example in the setting of Rankin-Selberg integrals. However, in recent years there has been an increased interest in non-generic representations and their degenerate Whittaker models. By the theory of Bernstein-Zelevinsky derivatives we can associate to each smooth irreducible representation of $GL_n(F)$ an integer partition of $n$, which encodes the "degeneracy" of the representation. By using these "highest derivative partitions" we can define a stratification of the category of smooth complex representations and prove the surprising fact that all of the strata categories are equivalent to module categories over commutative rings. This is joint work with David Helm.
15:30
The complexity of knots
Abstract
In his final paper in 1954, Alan Turing wrote `No systematic method is yet known by which one can tell whether two knots are the same.' Within the next 20 years, Wolfgang Haken and Geoffrey Hemion had discovered such a method. However, the computational complexity of this problem remains unknown. In my talk, I will give a survey on this area, that draws on the work of many low-dimensional topologists and geometers. Unfortunately, the current upper bounds on the computational complexity of the knot equivalence problem remain quite poor. However, there are some recent results indicating that, perhaps, knots are more tractable than they first seem. Specifically, I will explain a theorem that provides, for each knot type K, a polynomial p_K with the property that any two diagrams of K with n_1 and n_2 crossings differ by at most p_K(n_1) + p_K(n_2) Reidemeister moves.
This song starts as if they are making up as they go along. Which in Big Star's case probably wasn't a million miles from the truth. But wait for the chorus.
Big Star did it all. Made unfashionable music at the wrong time, sold no records, self-destructed and influenced generations of subsequent bands. As they sing: "Love me, we can work out the rest".
As you know we film plenty of student lectures and they are very popular on YouTube. But one think crops up again and again. Or rather doesn't crop up enough: working board pens. So we made a little compilation with the caption:
"What do you need to give a good student maths lecture? Knowledge of the subject? Good delivery? Interaction with the audience? Nah, none of those..."
Let's just say a lot of social media viewers didn't get it.
Oxford Open Doors 2024, happening this weekend, Saturday 14 & Sunday 15 September (but not in our building). Find out more on the Oxford Trust Preservation website.
Image: J M W Turner - Oxford High Street (1810)