Algebraic and Analytic Methods in Representation Theory


Book Description

This book is a compilation of several works from well-recognized figures in the field of Representation Theory. The presentation of the topic is unique in offering several different points of view, which should makethe book very useful to students and experts alike. Presents several different points of view on key topics in representation theory, from internationally known experts in the field




Analytic Methods in Arithmetic Geometry


Book Description

In the last decade or so, analytic methods have had great success in answering questions in arithmetic geometry and number theory. The School provided a unique opportunity to introduce graduate students to analytic methods in arithmetic geometry. The book contains four articles. Alina C. Cojocaru's article introduces sieving techniques to study the group structure of points of the reduction of an elliptic curve modulo a rational prime via its division fields. Harald A. Helfgott's article provides an introduction to the study of growth in groups of Lie type, with SL2(Fq) and some of its subgroups as the key examples. The article by Étienne Fouvry, Emmanuel Kowalski, Philippe Michel, and Will Sawin describes how a systematic use of the deep methods from ℓ-adic cohomology pioneered by Grothendieck and Deligne and further developed by Katz and Laumon help make progress on various classical questions from analytic number theory. The last article, by Andrew V. Sutherland, introduces Sato-Tate groups and explores their relationship with Galois representations, motivic L-functions, and Mumford-Tate groups.




Analytic and Algebraic Geometry


Book Description

"Analytic and algebraic geometers often study the same geometric structures but bring different methods to bear on them. While this dual approach has been spectacularly successful at solving problems, the language differences between algebra and analysis also represent a difficulty for students and researchers in geometry, particularly complex geometry. The PCMI program was designed to partially address this language gulf, by presenting some of the active developments in algebraic and analytic geometry in a form suitable for students on the 'other side' of the analysis-algebra language divide. One focal point of the summer school was multiplier ideals, a subject of wide current interest in both subjects. The present volume is based on a series of lectures at the PCMI summer school on analytic and algebraic geometry. The series is designed to give a high-level introduction to the advanced techniques behind some recent developments in algebraic and analytic geometry. The lectures contain many illustrative examples, detailed computations, and new perspectives on the topics presented, in order to enhance access of this material to non-specialists."--Publisher's description.




Algebraic and Analytic Geometry


Book Description

Modern introduction to algebraic geometry for undergraduates; uses analytic ideas to access algebraic theory.




Effective Methods in Algebraic Geometry


Book Description

On Lack of Effectiveness in Semi-algebraic Geometry.- A simple constructive proof of Canonical Resolution of Singularities.- Local Membership Problems for Polynomial Ideals.- Un Algorithme pour le Calcul des Résultants.- On algorithms for real algebraic plane curves.- Duality methods for the membership problem.- Exemples d'ensembles de Points en Position Uniforme.- Efficient Algorithms and Bounds for Wu-Ritt Characteristic Sets.- Noetherian Properties and Growth of some Associative Algebras.- Codes and Elliptic Curves.- Algorithmes - disons rapides - pour la décomposition d'une variété algébrique en composantes irréductibles et équidimensionnelles.- Complexity of Solving Systems of Linear Equations over the Rings of Differential Operators.- Membership problem, Representation problem and the Computation of the Radical for one-dimensional Ideals.- On the Complexity of Zero-dimensional Algebraic Systems.- A Single Exponential Bound on the Complexity of Computing Gröbner Bases of Zero Dimensional Ideals.- Algorithms for a Multiple Algebraic Extension.- Elementary constructive theory of ordered fields.- Effective real Nullstellensatz and variants.- Algorithms for the Solution of Systems of Linear Equations in Commutative Rings.- Une conjecture sur les anneaux de Chow A(G, ?) renforcée par un calcul formel.- Construction de courbes de genre 2 à partir de leurs modules.- Computing Syzygies à la Gau?-Jordan.- The non-scalar Model of Complexity in Computational Geometry.- Géométrie et Interpretations Génériques, un Algorithme.- Canonical Bases: Relations with Standard Bases, Finiteness Conditions and Application to Tame Automorphisms.- The tangent cone algorithm and some applications to local algebraic geometry.- Effective Methods for Systems of Algebraic Partial Differential Equations.- Finding roots of equations involving functions defined by first order algebraic differential equations.- Some Effective Methods in the Openness of Loci for Cohen-Macaulay and Gorenstein Properties.- Sign determination on zero dimensional sets.- A Classification of Finite-dimensional Monomial Algebras.- An algorithm related to compactifications of adjoint groups.- Deciding Consistency of Systems of Polynomial in Exponent Inequalities in Subexponential Time.




Analytic and Algebraic Geometry


Book Description

"Analytic and algebraic geometers often study the same geometric structures but bring different methods to bear on them. While this dual approach has been spectacularly successful at solving problems, the language differences between algebra and analysis also represent a difficulty for students and researchers in geometry, particularly complex geometry. The PCMI program was designed to partially address this language gulf, by presenting some of the active developments in algebraic and analytic geometry in a form suitable for students on the 'other side' of the analysis-algebra language divide. One focal point of the summer school was multiplier ideals, a subject of wide current interest in both subjects. The present volume is based on a series of lectures at the PCMI summer school on analytic and algebraic geometry. The series is designed to give a high-level introduction to the advanced techniques behind some recent developments in algebraic and analytic geometry. The lectures contain many illustrative examples, detailed computations, and new perspectives on the topics presented, in order to enhance access of this material to non-specialists."--Publisher's description.




Higher Geometry


Book Description




Developments and Retrospectives in Lie Theory


Book Description

The Lie Theory Workshop, founded by Joe Wolf (UC, Berkeley), has been running for over two decades. At the beginning, the top universities in California and Utah hosted the meetings, which continue to run on a quarterly basis. Experts in representation theory/Lie theory from various parts of the US, Europe, Asia (China, Japan, Singapore, Russia), Canada, and South and Central America were routinely invited to give talks at these meetings. Nowadays, the workshops are also hosted at universities in Louisiana, Virginia, and Oklahoma. These Lie theory workshops have been sponsored by the NSF, noting the talks have been seminal in describing new perspectives in the field covering broad areas of current research. The contributors have all participated in these Lie theory workshops and include in this volume expository articles which will cover representation theory from the algebraic, geometric, analytic, and topological perspectives with also important connections to math physics. These survey articles, review and update the prominent seminal series of workshops in representation/Lie theory mentioned above, and reflects the widespread influence of those workshops in such areas as harmonic analysis, representation theory, differential geometry, algebraic geometry, number theory, and mathematical physics. Many of the contributors have had prominent roles in both the classical and modern developments of Lie theory and its applications.




Polyhedral and Algebraic Methods in Computational Geometry


Book Description

Polyhedral and Algebraic Methods in Computational Geometry provides a thorough introduction into algorithmic geometry and its applications. It presents its primary topics from the viewpoints of discrete, convex and elementary algebraic geometry. The first part of the book studies classical problems and techniques that refer to polyhedral structures. The authors include a study on algorithms for computing convex hulls as well as the construction of Voronoi diagrams and Delone triangulations. The second part of the book develops the primary concepts of (non-linear) computational algebraic geometry. Here, the book looks at Gröbner bases and solving systems of polynomial equations. The theory is illustrated by applications in computer graphics, curve reconstruction and robotics. Throughout the book, interconnections between computational geometry and other disciplines (such as algebraic geometry, optimization and numerical mathematics) are established. Polyhedral and Algebraic Methods in Computational Geometry is directed towards advanced undergraduates in mathematics and computer science, as well as towards engineering students who are interested in the applications of computational geometry.