NTS ABSTRACTFall2019: Difference between revisions

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| bgcolor="#F0A0A0" align="center" style="font-size:125%" | '''Simon Marshall'''
| bgcolor="#F0A0A0" align="center" style="font-size:125%" | '''Simon Marshall'''
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| bgcolor="#BCD2EE"  align="center" | How many cohomological automorphic forms are there on GL_3?
| bgcolor="#BCD2EE"  align="center" | How many cohomological automorphic forms are there on $GL_3$?
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| bgcolor="#BCD2EE"  | I will give an overview of the limit multiplicity problem for automorphic representations, and describe applications to some Diophantine problems and the construction of quantum gates.  I will then talk about work of mine i this area, that gives a new bound for the number of cohomological cusp forms on $GL_3$ of fixed weight and growing level.  My proof uses $p$-adic techniques of Calegari and Emerton.
| bgcolor="#BCD2EE"  | I will give an overview of the limit multiplicity problem for automorphic representations, and describe applications to some Diophantine problems and the construction of quantum gates.  I will then talk about work of mine i this area, that gives a new bound for the number of cohomological cusp forms on $GL_3$ of fixed weight and growing level.  My proof uses $p$-adic techniques of Calegari and Emerton.

Revision as of 00:46, 15 October 2019

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Sep 5

Will Sawin
The sup-norm problem for automorphic forms over function fields and geometry

The sup-norm problem is a purely analytic question about automorphic forms, which asks for bounds on their largest value (when viewed as a function on a modular curve or similar space). We describe a new approach to this problem in the function field setting, which we carry through to provide new bounds for forms in GL_2 stronger than what can be proved for the analogous question about classical modular forms. This approach proceeds by viewing the automorphic form as a geometric object, following Drinfeld. It should be possible to prove bounds in greater generality by this approach in the future.


Sep 12

Yingkun Li
CM values of modular functions and factorization

The theory of complex multiplication tells us that the values of the j-invariant at CM points are algebraic integers. The norm of the difference of two such values has nice and explicit factorization, which was the subject of the seminal work of Gross and Zagier on singular moduli in the 1980s. In this talk, we will recall this classical result, review some recent factorization formula for other modular functions, and report some progress on a conjecture of Yui and Zagier. This is joint work with Tonghai Yang.


Sep 19

Soumya Sankar
Proportion of ordinary curves in some families

An abelian variety in characteristic [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] is said to be ordinary if its [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] torsion is as large as possible. In 2012, Cais, Ellenberg and Zureick-Brown made some conjectures about the distribution of the size of the [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] -torsion of an abelian variety. I will talk about some families which do not obey these heuristics, namely Jacobians of Artin-Schreier and superelliptic curves, and discuss the structure of the respective moduli spaces that make it so.


Oct 3

Patrick Allen
On the modularity of elliptic curves over imaginary quadratic fields

Wiles's proof of the modularity of semistable elliptic curves over the rationals uses the Langlands-Tunnell theorem as a starting point. In order to feed this into a modularity lifting theorem, one needs to use congruences between modular forms of weight one and modular forms of higher weight. Similar congruences are not known over imaginary quadratic fields and Wiles's strategy runs into problems right from the start. We circumvent this congruence problem and show that mod 3 Galois representations over imaginary quadratic fields arise from automorphic forms that are the analog of higher weight modular forms. Our argument relies on a 2-adic automorphy lifting theorem over CM fields together with a "2-3 switch." As an application, we deduce that a positive proportion of elliptic curves over imaginary quadratic fields are modular. This is joint work in progress with Chandrashekhar Khare and Jack Thorne.



Oct 10

Borys Kadets
Sectional monodromy groups of projective curves
Let $K$ be a field. Fix a projective curve $X \subset \mathbb{P}^r_K$ of degree $d$. A general hyperplane $H \in \mathbb{P}^{r*}$ intersects $X$ in $d$ points; the monodromy of $X \bigcap H$ as $H$ varies is a subgroup $G_X$ of $S_d$ known as the sectional monodromy group of $X$. When $K=\mathbb{C}$ (or in fact for $\mathrm{char} K = 0$), the equality $G_X=S_d$ was shown by Castelnuovo; this large monodromy fact is important in studying the degree-genus problem for projective curves. I will talk about the behaviour of sectional monodromy groups in positive characteristic. I will show that for a large class of curves the inclusion $G_X \supset A_d$ holds. On the other hand, for a seemingly simple family of curves $X_{m,n}$ given by the equation $x^n=y^mz^{n-m}$ in $\mathbb{P}^2$ I will completely characterize the possibilities for $G_{X_{n,m}}$; the list of possibilities includes linear groups $\mathrm{AGL}_n(q)$, $\mathrm{PGL}_2(q)$ as well as some sporadic simple groups.



Oct 17

Yousheng Shi
Generalized special cycles and theta series
We study generalized special cycles on Hermitian locally symmetric spaces $\Gamma \backslash D$ associated to the groups $G = U(p, q), \ \mathrm{Sp}(2n, \mathbb R)$ and $\mathrm{O}(2n)$. These cycles are algebraic and covered by symmetric spaces associated to subgroups of $G$ which are of the same type. Using the oscillator representation and the thesis of Greg Anderson, we show that Poincare duals of these generalized special cycles can be viewed as Fourier coefficients of a theta series. This gives new cases of theta lifts from the cohomology of Hermitian locally symmetric manifolds associated to $G$ to vector-valued automorphic forms associated to the groups $G' = \mathrm{U}(m, m), \ \mathrm{O}(m, m)$ or $\mathrm{Sp}(m, m)$ which are members of a dual pair with $G$ in the sense of Howe. This partially generalizes the work of Kudla and Millson on the special cycles on Hermitian locally symmetric spaces associated to the unitary groups.




Oct 24

Simon Marshall
How many cohomological automorphic forms are there on $GL_3$?
I will give an overview of the limit multiplicity problem for automorphic representations, and describe applications to some Diophantine problems and the construction of quantum gates. I will then talk about work of mine i this area, that gives a new bound for the number of cohomological cusp forms on $GL_3$ of fixed weight and growing level. My proof uses $p$-adic techniques of Calegari and Emerton.