Multiplicity algebras for rank 2 bundles on curves of small genus
Hitchin, N
International Journal of Mathematics
volume 35
issue 09
2441011
(17 Aug 2024)
Supersymmetry and the celestial Jacobi identity
Ball, A
Spradlin, M
Srikant, A
Volovich, A
Journal of High Energy Physics
volume 2024
issue 4
(18 Apr 2024)
Matrix models from black hole geometries
Boido, A
Luscher, A
Sparks, J
Journal of High Energy Physics
volume 2024
issue 5
(17 May 2024)
Professionals' views on providing personalized recurrence risks for de novo mutations: Implications for genetic counseling
Kay, A
Wells, J
Goriely, A
Hallowell, N
Journal of Genetic Counseling
(25 Jun 2024)
Options-driven Volatility Forecasting
Michael, N
Cucuringu, M
Howison, S
Recovering p-adic valuations from pro-p Galois groups
Koenigsmann, J
Strommen, K
Journal of the London Mathematical Society
volume 109
issue 5
(25 Apr 2024)
FaceTouch: detecting hand-to-face touch with supervised contrastive learning to assist in tracing infectious diseases
Ibrahim, M
Lyons, T
PLoS ONE
volume 19
issue 6
(13 Jun 2024)
I too [love] I2: a new class of hyperelastic isotropic incompressible models based solely on the second invariant
Kuhl, E
Goriely, A
Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
volume 188
(03 May 2024)
I too I 2 : A new class of hyperelastic isotropic incompressible models based solely on the second invariant
Kuhl, E
Goriely, A
Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
volume 188
105670
(Jul 2024)
Fri, 03 May 2024
12:00 -
13:00
Quillen Room
The canonical dimension of depth-zero supercuspidal representations
Mick Gielen
(University of Oxford)
Abstract
Associated to a complex admissible representation of a p-adic group is an invariant known is the "canonical dimension". It is closely related to the more well-studied invariant called the "wavefront set". The advantage of the canonical dimension over the wavefront set is that it allows for a completely different approach in computing it compared to the known computational methods for the wavefront set. In this talk we illustrate this point by finding a lower bound for the canonical dimension of any depth-zero supercuspidal representation, which depends only on the group and so is independent of the representation itself. To compute this lower bound, we consider the geometry of the associated Bruhat-Tits building.