Topology Seminar: Ningchuan Zhang (UPenn)

Krieger 170

Title: Profinite descent for Picard spaces and groups in K(n)-local chromatic homotopy theory Abstract: The study of Picard groups in homotopy theory was initiated by Hopkins-Mahowald-Sadofsky. They gave a general framework to compute Picard groups of the category of $K(n)$-local spectra. In the past decade, significant progress has been made in our understandings of Picard groups […]

Analysis seminar: Simon Marshall (Wisconsin)

Title: The asymptotic behavior of eigenfunctions on symmetric spacesAbstract: Let X be a compact locally symmetric space, and Y a locally symmetric subspace.  Let f be an eigenfunction of the invariant differential operators on X with eigenvalue tending to infinity.  I will present bounds for the period and Fourier coefficients of f along Y, and […]

Number theory seminar: Matthew Sunohara (Toronto)

Krieger 304

Title: On stable transfer operators and functorial transfer kernels Abstract: Langlands introduced stable transfer operators as a fundamental part of his proposal of Beyond Endoscopy. They are intended to be used in comparisons of his proposed refinements of stable trace formulas, in an analogous role to that of endoscopic transfer operators in the theory of […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Lillian Pierce (Duke)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Number-theoretic methods to produce counterexamples for questions motivated by PDE’s.Abstract: In 1980 Carleson posed a question in PDE’s: how “well-behaved” must an initial data function be, to guarantee pointwise convergence of the solution of the linear Schrödinger equation (as time goes to zero)? After being studied by many authors over nearly 40 years, this celebrated […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Lillian Pierce (Duke) (cont.)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Number-theoretic methods to produce counterexamples for questions motivated by PDE’s.Abstract: In 1980 Carleson posed a question in PDE’s: how “well-behaved” must an initial data function be, to guarantee pointwise convergence of the solution of the linear Schrödinger equation (as time goes to zero)? After being studied by many authors over nearly 40 years, this celebrated […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Sug Woo Shin (Berkeley)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Automorphic Galois representations for classical groupsAbstract: It is a theorem due to many people, most recently by Harris-Lan-Taylor-Thorne and Scholze, that there exist Galois representations associated with regular cuspidal automorphic representations of GL(n) over totally real or CM fields. This may be thought of as one direction of the global Langlands correspondence for GL(n). I […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Sug Woo Shin (Berkeley) (cont.)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Automorphic Galois representations for classical groupsAbstract: It is a theorem due to many people, most recently by Harris-Lan-Taylor-Thorne and Scholze, that there exist Galois representations associated with regular cuspidal automorphic representations of GL(n) over totally real or CM fields. This may be thought of as one direction of the global Langlands correspondence for GL(n). I […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Ben Elias (Oregon)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Categorical diagonalization.Abstract: We give an introduction to the circle of ideas known as categorification, guided by the following question: what might it mean to diagonalize a functor?Given a category, one can forget most of the information and just remember skeletal information about the objects up to isomorphism, a process known as decategorification. For example, the […]

JHU–UMD Algebra and Number Theory Day: Ben Elias (Oregon) (cont.)

Bloomberg 462

Title: Categorical diagonalization.Abstract: We give an introduction to the circle of ideas known as categorification, guided by the following question: what might it mean to diagonalize a functor?Given a category, one can forget most of the information and just remember skeletal information about the objects up to isomorphism, a process known as decategorification. For example, the […]

Topology Seminar: Niny Arcila-Maya (Duke)

Krieger 170

Title: Decomposition problem for topological Azumaya algebras with an involution of the first kindAbstract: Topological Azumaya algebras (TAAs) over a space are topological shadows of more complicated algebraic Azumaya algebras defined over schemes. Tensor product is a well-defined operation on TAAs. Hence given a TAA $mathcal{A}$ of degree $mn$ over $X$, where $m$ and $n$ […]