BlackBIRDS: Black-Box Inference foR Differentiable Simulators
Quera-Bofarull, A Dyer, J Calinescu, A Farmer, J Wooldridge, M Journal of Open Source Software volume 8 issue 89 5776-5776 (28 Sep 2023)
Unifying constructions of non-invertible symmetries
Bhardwaj, L Schafer-Nameki, S Tiwari, A SciPost Physics volume 15 issue 3 (28 Sep 2023)
Mon, 06 Nov 2023
16:00
L1

A Basic Problem in Analytic Number Theory

George Robinson
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

I will discuss a basic problem in analytic number theory which has appeared recently in my work. This will be a gentle introduction to the Gauss circle problem, hopefully with a discussion of some extensions and applications to understanding L-functions.

Mon, 30 Oct 2023
16:00
C2

Hodge theory in positive characteristic

Inés Borchers Arias
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

I will introduce the Hodge-de-Rham spectral sequence and formulate an algebraic Hodge decomposition theorem. Time permitting, I will sketch Deligne and Illusie’s proof of the Hodge decomposition using positive characteristic methods.

Mon, 16 Oct 2023
16:00
C3

Avoiding Problems

Francesco Ballini
(University of Oxford )
Abstract

In 2019 Masser and Zannier proved that "most" abelian varieties over the algebraic numbers are not isogenous to the jacobian of any curve (where "most" refers to an ordering by some suitable height function). We will see how this result fits in the general Zilber-Pink Conjecture picture and we discuss some (rather concrete) analogous problems in a power of the modular curve Y(1).

Mon, 09 Oct 2023
16:00
C3

Primes in arithmetic progressions to smooth moduli

Julia Stadlmann
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

The twin prime conjecture asserts that there are infinitely many primes p for which p+2 is also prime. This conjecture appears far out of reach of current mathematical techniques. However, in 2013 Zhang achieved a breakthrough, showing that there exists some positive integer h for which p and p+h are both prime infinitely often. Equidistribution estimates for primes in arithmetic progressions to smooth moduli were a key ingredient of his work. In this talk, I will sketch what role these estimates play in proofs of bounded gaps between primes. I will also show how a refinement of the q-van der Corput method can be used to improve on equidistribution estimates of the Polymath project for primes in APs to smooth moduli.

Tue, 07 Nov 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L5

A solution functor for D-cap-modules

Finn Wiersig
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

The theory of D-modules has found remarkable applications in various mathematical areas, for example, the representation theory of complex semi-simple Lie algebras. Two pivotal theorems in this field are the Beilinson-Bernstein Localisation Theorem and the Riemann-Hilbert Correspondence. This talk will explore a p-adic analogue. Ardakov-Wadsley introduced the sheaf D-cap of infinite order differential operators on a given smooth rigid-analytic variety to develop a p-adic counterpart for the Beilinson-Bernstein localisation. However, the classical approach to the Riemann-Hilbert Correspondence does not apply in the p-adic context. I will present an alternative approach, introducing a solution functor for D-cap-modules using new methods from p-adic Hodge theory.

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