This page list all events and seminars that take place in the department this week. Please use the form below to choose a different week or date range.

Algebraic Geometry and Number Theory

Correlation between primes in short intervals on curves over finite fields

Jan 10, 12:10—13:30, 2018, TBD

Speaker

Efrat Bank (University of Michigan)

Abstract

In this talk, I present an analogue of the Hardy-Littlewood conjecture on the asymptotic distribution of prime constellations in the setting of short intervals in function fields of smooth projective curves over finite fields. I will discuss the definition of a “short interval” on a curve as an additive translation of the space of global sections of a sufficiently positive divisor E by a suitable rational function f, and show how this definition generalizes the definition of a short interval in the polynomial setting. I will give a sketch of the proof which includes a computation of a certain Galois group, and a counting argument, namely, Chebotarev density type theorem.

This is a joint work with Tyler Foster.

Algebraic Geometry and Number Theory

The de Rham homology and cohomology of complete local rings

Jan 10, 15:10—16:30, 2018, Math -101

Speaker

Gennady Lyubeznik (University of Minnesota)

Abstract

De Rham homology and cohomology of algebraic varieties over a field of characteristic 0 were studied by R. Hartshorne in a 1975 paper. In the same paper Hartshorne gave an analogous definition for complete local rings of equicharacterisitc 0 and proved that in this complete local case the properties of de Rham homology and cohomology were similar to the global case. In particular, both in the local and in the global case there exist Hodge-to-deRham spectral sequences for homology and cohomology. In the local case one gets those spectral sequences from surjecting a regular local ring onto the local ring in question (and in the global case by embedding the algebraic variety in question into a regular algebric variety)..

Recently my student Nick Switala proved the following in the complete local case: beginning with the E_2 page the Hodge-to-deRham spectral sequences both for homology and cohomology are finite-dimensional and the isomorphism classes of those spectral sequences depend only the local ring in question, not on the surjection from a regular local ring. I am going to explain Switala’s results in my talk.

Colloquium

The Search for the Exotic : Subfactors and Conformal Field Theory

Jan 16, 14:30—15:30, 2018, Math -101

Speaker

David Evans (Cardiff University)

Abstract

I will discuss the programme to understand conformal field theory via subfactors and twisted equivariant K-theory. This has also resulted in a better understanding of the double of the Haagerup subfactor, which was previously thought to be exotic and un-related to known models.


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