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2 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: "No seminar" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Sheldon Joyner (Western) "Quantized Theta Functions I" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 106 In this informal lecture series we discuss Manin's work on quantum versions of theta functions |
3 Stable Homotopy
Stable Homotopy Speaker: Enxin Wu (Western) "Spanier-Whitehead Category and Adams' Stable Homotopy Category" Time: 14:00 Room: MC 107 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Gordon Sinnamon (Western) "Bootstrapping and the Fourier Transform" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 Techniques from the theory of positive integral operators are
applied to give a new method for generating weighted Fourier inequalities. |
4 Colloquium
Colloquium Speaker: Krzysztof Kurdyka (Université de Savoie) "When injectivity of selfmaps implies surjectivity ?" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 106 It is known that injective polynomial maps
Cn -> Cn are surjective. In fact a theorem of Ax (1968)
states that this is also true for injective regular maps
X -> X, where X is an algebraic (possibly singular) variety
over algebraically closed field of char
=0. The same problem over the field of reals is more difficult.
Bialynicki-Birula and Rosenlicht (1962) have proved that
injective polynomial maps
Rn -> Rn are surjective. But the general case of algebraic
injective maps X-> X , where X is real algebraic (possibly
singular),
was solved only recently by the author. The method is essentially
topological (Borel-Moore
homology), based on a fine decomposition of real algebraic sets into
so called
arc-symmetric components. |
5 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Masoud Khalkhali (Western) "Introduction to the classical theory of theta functions" Time: 15:00 Room: MC 108 |
6 Algebra Seminar
Algebra Seminar Speaker: Emre Coskun (Michigan State University) "The moduli space of representations of Clifford algebras" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 106 |
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9 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Dan Christensen (Western) "Categories of smooth spaces" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 I will describe some categories of "smooth spaces" which generalize the
notion of manifold. The generalizations allow us to form smooth spaces
consisting of subsets and quotients of manifolds, as well as loop spaces
and other function spaces. In more technical language, these categories
of smooth spaces are complete, cocomplete and cartesian closed. I will
give examples and discuss possible applications.
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10 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Richard Hind (Notre-Dame) "Symplectic embeddings and holomorphic curves" Time: 14:30 Room: MC 107 We obtain a new obstruction to symplectic embeddings derived using the Symplectic Field Theory. Pizza Seminar
Pizza Seminar Speaker: Matthias Franz (Western) "Primes in Cryptography" Time: 16:30 Room: MC 107 Although we might not be aware of it, Number Theory has entered our
daily lives: encrypted Internet connections (e.g., for online banking)
are based on algorithms involving giant prime numbers with several
hundred or more digits. In this talk, I will explain how RSA, the most prominent of these public
key encryption schemes, works. Then I will address the important
question of how one can actually find the large primes needed for these
applications. The primality tests used in practice turn out to be
probabilistic, which means that they may sometimes give a wrong answer.
Hopefully, I will convince you that this is no reason to be worried
about the money in your account.
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11 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Ivan Dynov (York University) "Type III von Neumann algebras associated the infinite-dimensional nilpotent group B_0^\mathbb Z" Time: 15:00 Room: MC 106 We consider von Neumann algebras generated by regular representations of the infinite-dimensional group B_0^\mathbb Z of infinite, finite-order upper triangular matrices. These regular representations were defined and studied by Alexander Kosyak. They depend on a Gaussian measure on the group of infinite (arbitrary order) upper triangular matrices. A certain condition on the measure implies that the right regular representation is reducible and that the von Neumann algebra generated by the right regular representation is the commutant of the left one. In this case we prove that these von Neumann algebras are type III_1 factors, according to the classification of Alain Connes.
Colloquium
Colloquium Speaker: Richard Hind (Notre Dame University) "Symplectomorphisms of products" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 Hamiltonian (or symplectic) diffeomorphisms are well-known to
preserve volume. Gromov's work in the eighties implied that the smallest
factor in a polydisk also corresponds to an invariant of symplectic
embeddings. In dimensions at least 6 we will ask to what extent the areas of
other factors place restrictions on symplectic embeddings. Specific
constructions will show that any such restrictions must be fairly weak, but
they nevertheless exist and remarkably our constructions turn out to be in
some sense sharp. We will derive some implications for Hofer's metric on
groups of Hamiltonian diffeomorphisms.
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12 Stable Homotopy
Stable Homotopy Speaker: Peter Oman (Western) "Enriched Category Theory and Homotopy Theory" Time: 14:00 Room: MC 107 |
13 Algebra Seminar
Algebra Seminar Speaker: *** joint with NCG Seminar *** Hadi Salmasian (University of Windsor) "Character sheaves and representations of p-adic groups" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 106 In this talk we give a geometric interpretation of characters of certain representations of p-adic GL(n), which are usually called depth zero supercuspidal representations, in terms of Euler characteristics of certain character sheaves. Our work relies on Lusztig's theory of character sheaves, and in some sense suggests a general framework for relating character sheaves on groups over a nonarchimedean local field to smooth representations. (Joint with Clifton Cunningham.) |
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23 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Aji Dhillon (Western) "Non existence of the universal bundle according to Nori" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 A theorem of Ramanan says that there is no universal
bundle on any Zariski open subset of the moduli space of stable
bundles over a curve. In this talk I will outline a proof of this
fact due to Nori. The idea is to restrict a family to an analytic
neighbourhood of the trivial bundle. Luna's etale slice
theorem comes to the rescue and gives a very concrete description
of this analytic neighbourhood which one uses to prove the theorem. |
24 Stable Homotopy
Stable Homotopy Speaker: Peter Oman (Western) "Postponed to next week" Time: 14:00 Room: MC 107 |
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26 Algebra Seminar
Algebra Seminar Speaker: David Wehlau (Queen's University) "TBA" Time: 14:30 Room: MC 108 |
27 Algebra Seminar
Algebra Seminar Speaker: Eric Schost (Western) "The search for a secure curve of genus 2" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 106 The most famous representative of public-key cryptography is the RSA cryptosystem. However, it is now losing its predominance: elliptic curve cryptography is more efficient, in terms of speed and key size. Using curves of genus 2 may provide systems that are faster than their elliptic analogues. I will describe current efforts to find a "secure" curve of genus 2, and give an overview of the extensive computations involved. Joint work with Pierrick Gaudry |
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