Current developments in mathematics 2018

Contributor(s): edited by Jerison, David | Kisin, Mark | Seidel, Paul | Stanley, Richard | Yau, Horng-Tzer | Yau, Shing-TungMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Massachussets: International Press of Boston, Inc., [c2020]Description: 264 pISBN: 9781571463876LOC classification: QA1. C877
Contents:
1) Recent progress in the Zimmer program by Aaron Brown 2) Motives and L-functions by Frank Calegari 3) On the averaged Colmez conjecture by Benjamin Howard 4) Review of Yau's conjecture on zero sets of Laplace eigenfunctions by Alexander Logunov and Eugenia Malinnikova 5) Phase transitions of random constraint satisfaction problems by Allan Sly
Summary: The Current Developments in Mathematics (CDM) conference is an annual seminar, jointly hosted by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and devoted to surveying the most recent developments in all areas of mathematics. The CDM selection committee consists of three professors from Harvard University and three from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; each committee member is prominent and working in the forefront of mathematics. In choosing lecturers for each conference, the committee members take a broad look at the various areas of mathematics, and select lecturers who are not only prominent specialists in their fields, but also transcend classical perceptions within their fields.
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1) Recent progress in the Zimmer program by Aaron Brown
2) Motives and L-functions by Frank Calegari
3) On the averaged Colmez conjecture by Benjamin Howard
4) Review of Yau's conjecture on zero sets of Laplace eigenfunctions by Alexander Logunov and Eugenia Malinnikova
5) Phase transitions of random constraint satisfaction problems by Allan Sly

The Current Developments in Mathematics (CDM) conference is an annual seminar, jointly hosted by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and devoted to surveying the most recent developments in all areas of mathematics. The CDM selection committee consists of three professors from Harvard University and three from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; each committee member is prominent and working in the forefront of mathematics. In choosing lecturers for each conference, the committee members take a broad look at the various areas of mathematics, and select lecturers who are not only prominent specialists in their fields, but also transcend classical perceptions within their fields.

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