Selected Papers on Harmonic Analysis, Groups, and Invariants


Book Description

The five papers originally appeared in Japanese in the journal Sugaku and would ordinarily appear in the Society's translation of that journal, but are published separately here to expedite their dissemination. They explore such aspects as representation theory, differential geometry, invariant theory, and complex analysis. No index. Member prices are $47 for institutions and $35 for individual. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.




Harmonic Analysis, Group Representations, Automorphic Forms, and Invariant Theory


Book Description

This volume carries the same title as that of an international conference held at the National University of Singapore, 9OCo11 January 2006 on the occasion of Roger E. Howe''s 60th birthday. Authored by leading members of the Lie theory community, these contributions, expanded from invited lectures given at the conference, are a fitting tribute to the originality, depth and influence of Howe''s mathematical work. The range and diversity of the topics will appeal to a broad audience of research mathematicians and graduate students interested in symmetry and its profound applications. Sample Chapter(s). Foreword (21 KB). Chapter 1: The Theta Correspondence Over R (342 KB). Contents: The Theta Correspondence over R (J Adams); The Heisenberg Group, SL (3, R), and Rigidity (A iap et al.); Pfaffians and Strategies for Integer Choice Games (R Evans & N Wallach); When is an L -Function Non-Vanishing in Part of the Critical Strip? (S Gelbart); Cohomological Automorphic Forms on Unitary Groups, II: Period Relations and Values of L -Functions (M Harris); The Inversion Formula and Holomorphic Extension of the Minimal Representation of the Conformal Group (T Kobayashi & G Mano); Classification des S(r)ries Discr tes pour Certains Groupes Classiques p- Adiques (C Moeglin); Some Algebras of Essentially Compact Distributions of a Reductive p -Adic Group (A Moy & M Tadic); Annihilators of Generalized Verma Modules of the Scalar Type for Classical Lie Algebras (T Oshima); Branching to a Maximal Compact Subgroup (D A Vogan, Jr.); Small Semisimple Subalgebras of Semisimple Lie Algebras (J F Willenbring & G J Zuckerman). Readership: Graduate students and research mathematicians in harmonic analysis, group representations, automorphic forms and invariant theory."




Selected Papers on Differential Equations and Analysis


Book Description

This volume contains translations of papers that originally appeared in the Japanese journal Sugaku. The papers range over a variety of topics, including differential equations with free boundary, singular integral operators, operator algebras, and relations between the Brownian motion on a manifold with function theory. The volume is suitable for graduate students and research mathematicians interested in analysis and differential equations."




Representations of Reductive Groups


Book Description

Over the last forty years, David Vogan has left an indelible imprint on the representation theory of reductive groups. His groundbreaking ideas have lead to deep advances in the theory of real and p-adic groups, and have forged lasting connections with other subjects, including number theory, automorphic forms, algebraic geometry, and combinatorics. Representations of Reductive Groups is an outgrowth of the conference of the same name, dedicated to David Vogan on his 60th birthday, which took place at MIT on May 19-23, 2014. This volume highlights the depth and breadth of Vogan's influence over the subjects mentioned above, and point to many exciting new directions that remain to be explored. Notably, the first article by McGovern and Trapa offers an overview of Vogan's body of work, placing his ideas in a historical context. Contributors: Pramod N. Achar, Jeffrey D. Adams, Dan Barbasch, Manjul Bhargava, Cédric Bonnafé, Dan Ciubotaru, Meinolf Geck, William Graham, Benedict H. Gross, Xuhua He, Jing-Song Huang, Toshiyuki Kobayashi, Bertram Kostant, Wenjing Li, George Lusztig, Eric Marberg, William M. McGovern, Wilfried Schmid, Kari Vilonen, Diana Shelstad, Peter E. Trapa, David A. Vogan, Jr., Nolan R. Wallach, Xiaoheng Wang, Geordie Williamson




Lie Theory and Its Applications in Physics


Book Description

This volume presents modern trends in the area of symmetries and their applications based on contributions to the workshop "Lie Theory and Its Applications in Physics" held near Varna (Bulgaria) in June 2019. Traditionally, Lie theory is a tool to build mathematical models for physical systems. Recently, the trend is towards geometrization of the mathematical description of physical systems and objects. A geometric approach to a system yields in general some notion of symmetry, which is very helpful in understanding its structure. Geometrization and symmetries are meant in their widest sense, i.e., representation theory, algebraic geometry, number theory, infinite-dimensional Lie algebras and groups, superalgebras and supergroups, groups and quantum groups, noncommutative geometry, symmetries of linear and nonlinear partial differential operators, special functions, and others. Furthermore, the necessary tools from functional analysis are included. This is a large interdisciplinary and interrelated field. The topics covered in this volume from the workshop represent the most modern trends in the field : Representation Theory, Symmetries in String Theories, Symmetries in Gravity Theories, Supergravity, Conformal Field Theory, Integrable Systems, Polylogarithms, and Supersymmetry. They also include Supersymmetric Calogero-type models, Quantum Groups, Deformations, Quantum Computing and Deep Learning, Entanglement, Applications to Quantum Theory, and Exceptional Quantum Algebra for the standard model of particle physics This book is suitable for a broad audience of mathematicians, mathematical physicists, and theoretical physicists, including researchers and graduate students interested in Lie Theory.




Proceedings of the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society, Volume XIV


Book Description

Contains articles on analysis, probability, partial differential operators, frames, and other areas of mathematics. This volume also contains a comprehensive article about the classification of pseudo-regular convex polyhedra. It is suitable for a broad group of graduate students and researchers interested in the topics presented here.




Proceedings of the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society, Volume VIII


Book Description

The articles in this collection present new results in partial differential equations, numerical analysis, probability theory, and geometry. The results, ideas, and methods given in the book will be of interest to a broad range of specialists.




Model Theory and Applications


Book Description

This volume is a collection of papers on model theory and its applications. The longest paper, "Model Theory of Unitriangular Groups" by O. V. Belegradek, forms a subtle general theory behind Mal'tsev's famous correspondence between rings and groups. This is the first published paper on the topic. Given the present model-theoretic interest in algebraic groups, Belegradek's work is of particular interest to logicians and algebraists. The rest of the collection consists of papers on various questions of model theory, mainly on stability theory. Contributors are leading Russian researchers in the field.




Proceedings of the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society Volume V


Book Description

This volume contains 10 papers with new results on problems in mathematical physics, differential equations, and probability. Included also is an article on the dramatic history of mathematics in Leningrad in the 1930s.




Representation Theory and Mathematical Physics


Book Description

This volume contains the proceedings of the conference on Representation Theory and Mathematical Physics, in honor of Gregg Zuckerman's 60th birthday, held October 24-27, 2009, at Yale University. Lie groups and their representations play a fundamental role in mathematics, in particular because of connections to geometry, topology, number theory, physics, combinatorics, and many other areas. Representation theory is one of the cornerstones of the Langlands program in number theory, dating to the 1970s. Zuckerman's work on derived functors, the translation principle, and coherent continuation lie at the heart of the modern theory of representations of Lie groups. One of the major unsolved problems in representation theory is that of the unitary dual. The fact that there is, in principle, a finite algorithm for computing the unitary dual relies heavily on Zuckerman's work. In recent years there has been a fruitful interplay between mathematics and physics, in geometric representation theory, string theory, and other areas. New developments on chiral algebras, representation theory of affine Kac-Moody algebras, and the geometric Langlands correspondence are some of the focal points of this volume. Recent developments in the geometric Langlands program point to exciting connections between certain automorphic representations and dual fibrations in geometric mirror symmetry.