08:45 AM - 09:00 AM
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Welcome
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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09:00 AM - 10:00 AM
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Introduction to the Langlands program and the Fundamental Lemma
Thomas Hales (University of Pittsburgh)
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
These talks will give an introductory survey of the following
topics: an introduction to the Langlands conjectures in their classical form as motivated from problems in number theory and automorphic representation theory, uses of the trace formula and problems such as the fundamental lemma that it motivates, and a survey of the proof of the fundamental lemma and its transfer back to characteristic zero.
- Supplements
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10:00 AM - 10:30 AM
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Tea
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- Location
- SLMath: Atrium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
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The Geometric Langlands Correspondence
Dmytro Arinkin (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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Notes
1.52 MB application/pdf
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11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
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Gauge theory and Langlands duality
Edward Frenkel (University of California, Berkeley)
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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12:30 PM - 02:00 PM
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Lunch
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- Location
- SLMath: Atrium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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02:00 PM - 03:00 PM
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Geometry of Quiver varieties
Victor Ginzburg (University of Chicago)
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
- --
- Supplements
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03:00 PM - 03:30 PM
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Tea
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- Location
- SLMath: Atrium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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03:30 PM - 04:00 PM
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Quivers, curves, Kac polynomials and the number of stable Higgs bundles
olivier schiffmann (Université de Paris XI)
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- Location
- SLMath: Eisenbud Auditorium
- Video
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- Abstract
In the early 80's Kac proved that the number of indecomposable representations
of a given quiver (and a given dimension) over a finite field is a polynomial in the size of the finite field.
Hua later gave an explicit formula for these polynomials and subsequent representation-theoretic or
geometric interpretations for these polynomials were given by Crawley-Boevey, Van den Bergh, Hausel
and others, leading to a beautiful and still mysterious picture.
The aim of this mini-course is to explain a 'global' analog of some of these results, in which the category
of representations of a quiver gets replaced by the category of coherent sheaves on a smooth projective curve.
As an application, we will give a formula for the number of stable Higgs bundles over such a curve defined
over a finite field.
- Supplements
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04:30 PM - 06:20 PM
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Reception
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- Location
- SLMath: Atrium
- Video
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- Abstract
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- Supplements
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