• GEMS Workshop: Symmetry with Professor Michael Orrison, from Harvey Mudd College

    Shanahan 1480, Harvey Mudd College 301 Platt Blvd., Claremont, CA, United States

    TOPIC: Symmetry Symmetry seems to be an important idea in mathematics, but how do mathematicians think about symmetry? In this workshop, we’ll talk about mathematical objects called groups, see how they are used to describe symmetry, and then put them to work to help us answer some nontrivial counting problems. WHAT IS GEMS: The Gateway to […]

  • Matroids: a unified theory of independence (Mauricio Gomez Lopez, University of Oregon)

    Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

    In this talk, I will give an overview of the theory of matroids. These are mathematical objects which capture the combinatorial essence of linear independence. Besides providing some basic definitions of this theory, I will discuss several examples of matroids and explain some connections with optimization. Also, in this talk, I will introduce matroid polytopes, […]

  • Topology Seminar: Mauricio Gomez Lopez (U. Oregon)

    Title: Cobordism Categories and Spaces of Manifolds. Abstract: Cobordisms have been one of the central objects in topology since the pioneering work of Rene Thom, which provided the first link […]

  • Formal geometry and characteristic classes

    I plan to explain how a purely algebraic technique involving Lie Algebra Cohomology can be used to construct standard characteristic classes of vector bundles and foliations (in fact, it could […]

  • Sporadic points on modular curves (Ozlem Ejder, Colorado State University)

    Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

    A classic and fundamental result in number theory is due to Mordell who proved that the set of points on an elliptic curve defined over a number field forms a finitely generated abelian group; in particular, it has a finite torsion subgroup. An essential tool to study elliptic curves is the modular curves which are […]

  • Magnitude meets persistence. What happens after?

    Argue Auditorium, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States

    The magnitude is an isometric invariant of metric spaces that was introduced by Tom Leinster in 2010, and is currently the object of intense research, as it has been shown […]

  • Faster point counting for curves over prime power rings (Maurice Rojas, Texas A&M)

    Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

    Counting points on algebraic curves over finite fields has numerous applications in communications and cryptology, and has led to some of the most beautiful results in 20th century arithmetic geometry. A natural generalization is to count the number of points over prime power rings, e.g., the integers modulo a prime power. However, the theory behind the latter kind of point […]