NTS Spring 2015 Abstract

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Jan 29

Lillian Pierce
Averages and moments associated to class numbers of imaginary quadratic fields

Given an imaginary quadratic field of discriminant d, consider the p-part of the associated class number for a prime p. This quantity is well understood for p=2, and significant results are known for p=3, but much less is known for larger primes. One important type of question is to prove upper bounds for the p-part. Desirable upper bounds could take several forms: either “pointwise” upper bounds that hold for the p-part uniformly over all discriminants, or upper bounds for the p-part when averaged over all discriminants, or upper bounds for higher moments of the p-part. This talk will discuss recent results (joint work with Roger Heath-Brown) that provide new upper bounds for averages and moments of p-parts for odd primes.


Feb 05

Keerthi Madapusi
Heights of special divisors on orthogonal Shimura varieties

The Gross-Zagier formula relates two complex numbers obtained in seemingly very disparate ways: The Neron-Tate height pairing between Heegner points on elliptic curves, and the central derivative of a certain automorphic L-function of Rankin type. I will explain a variant of this in higher dimensions. On the geometric side, the intersection theory will now take place on Shimura varieties associated with orthogonal groups. On the analytic side, we will find Rankin-Selberg L-functions involving modular forms of half-integral weight. This is joint work with Fabrizio Andreatta, Eyal Goren and Ben Howard.


Feb 19

David Zureick-Brown
The canonical ring of a stacky curve

We give a generalization to stacks of the classical theorem of Petri -- i.e., we give a presentation for the canonical ring of a stacky curve. This is motivated by the following application: we give an explicit presentation for the ring of modular forms for a Fuchsian group with cofinite area, which depends on the signature of the group. (The talk will be mostly geometric and will require little understanding of modular forms.) This is joint work with John Voight.


Feb 26

Rachel Davis
Origami and Galois representations

Let E be an elliptic curve over Q. An origami is a pair (C, f), where C is a curve and f : C → E is a map, branched only above one point. When C is E and f is multiplication by n, there is an associated Galois representation (that depends on a rational point P ∈ E) to an affine general linear group. We explain this and then study the Galois theory for origami with non-abelian monodromy groups. This is joint work with Edray Goins.


Mar 05

Hongbo Yin
Some non-congruence subgroups and the associated modular curves

We give some new non-congruence subgroups which is close to the Fermat groups but with very different properties.


Mar 12

Tonghai Yang
Informal tutorial on the Heisenberg group and Weil representation

This will be an informal tutorial on the Heisenberg group and the Weil representation of symplectic groups over local fields and, if time permits, adele rings. The motivation is partly via theta functions.


Mar 19

Brian Cook
Forms in many variables and subsets of the integers

This talk is about problems related to forms in many variables where the variables are restricted to certain subsets of the integers.


Apr 09

Daniel Ross
Boston-Bush-Hajir heuristics: Moments and function fields

Cohen and Lenstra developed a heuristic predicting the distribution of the p-parts of the class groups of imaginary quadratic number fields--that is, the Galois groups of the maximal unramified abelian p-extensions of the imaginary quadratics. Boston, Bush, and Hajir extended this to a heuristic describing the distribution of the maximal unramified (no longer necessarily abelian) p-extensions of the imaginary quadratics. In this talk we explain this distribution its rephrasing in terms of its moments, and some evidence for the conjecture coming from its function field analogue.


Apr 30

David Roberts
Coming soon...

Coming soon...


May 07

Jesse Wolfson
Coming soon...

Coming soon...


May 14

Quoc Ho
Coming soon...

Coming soon...


Organizer contact information

Sean Rostami (srostami@math.wisc.edu)


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