Tue, 03 Nov 2015

15:45 - 16:45
L4

Poles of maximal order of Igusa zeta functions

Johannes Nicaise
(Imperial)
Abstract

Igusa's p-adic zeta function $Z(s)$ attached to a polynomial $f$ in $N$ variables is a meromorphic function on the complex plane that encodes the numbers of solutions of the equation $f=0$ modulo powers of a prime $p$. It is expressed as a $p$-adic integral, and Igusa proved that it is rational in $p^{-s}$ using resolution of singularities and the change of variables formula. From this computation it is immediately clear that the order of a pole of $Z(s)$ is at most $N$, the number of variables in $f$. In 1999, Wim Veys conjectured that the only possible pole of order $N$ of the so-called topological zeta function of $f$ is minus the log canonical threshold of $f$. I will explain a proof of this conjecture, which also applies to the $p$-adic and motivic zeta functions. The proof is inspired by non-archimedean geometry and Mirror Symmetry, but the main technique that is used is the Minimal Model program in birational geometry. This talk is based on joint work with Chenyang Xu.

Wed, 14 Oct 2015
16:00
C2

tba

Robin Knight
(Oxford)
Tue, 20 Oct 2015

12:00 - 13:30
L4

Recent progress in Ambitwistor strings

Yvonne Geyer
(Oxford)
Abstract

New ambitwistor string models are presented for a variety of theories and older models are shown to work at 1 loop and perhaps higher using a simpler formulation on the Riemann sphere.

Wed, 14 Oct 2015

11:00 - 12:30
N3.12

Properties of random groups.

Rob Kropholler
(Oxford)
Abstract

Many people talk about properties that you would expect of a group. When they say this they are considering random groups, I will define what it means to pick a random group in one of many models and will give some properties that these groups will have with overwhelming probability. I will look at the proof of some of these results although the talk will mainly avoid proving things rigorously.

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