• Claremont Topology Seminar: Hyunki Min (UCLA)

    Fletcher 110, Pitzer College 1050 N Mills Ave, Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Contact structures and the mapping class group of lens spaces Abstract: One important problem in contact topology is to classify contact structures on a given manifold. Around 20 years […]

  • Applied Math Seminar: Adam Yassine (Pomona College)

    Estella 1021 (Emmy Noether Room), Pomona College Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: On the Composition of Classical Mechanical Systems Abstract: Compositionality is a basic principle for understanding the physical world. The underlying idea is to study a system by studying the […]

  • History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar: Kris Palmieri (University of Chicago)

    Fletcher 110, Pitzer College 1050 N Mills Ave, Claremont, CA, United States

    True Grit: Writing the History of Women at Yerkes Observatory, 1895–1950 Abstract: Women at Yerkes Observatory earned advanced degrees, conducted their own research, collaborated on projects with peers of both sexes, and authored publications in their own names in the first half of the Twentieth Century. Yet Alice Hall Farnsworth, Mary Murray Hopkins, Harriet McWilliams […]

  • f^*-vectors of lattice polytopes (Max Hlavacek, Pomona College)

    Roberts North 102, CMC

    The Ehrhart polynomial of a lattice polytope P counts the number of integer points in the nth integral dilate of P. The f^* -vector of P, introduced by Felix Breuer in 2012, is the vector of coefficients of the Ehrhart polynomial with respect to the binomial coefficient basis . Similarly to h and h^* -vectors, […]

  • Geometry and Topology Seminar: Claremont Colleges Course Previews for Spring 2024

    Fletcher 110, Pitzer College 1050 N Mills Ave, Claremont, CA, United States

    On November 14th, Tuesday from 3-4pm in Fletcher 110, Geometry and Topology Seminar invites students and faculty to a course preview session devoted to a discussion and presentations about upcoming Spring 2024 courses in geometry, topology and/or with applications in geometry and topology to help students make their enrollment choices. We will have some refreshments […]

  • Adinkra Heights and Color-Splitting Rainbows (Ursula Whitcher, American Mathematical Society)

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

    Title: Adinkra Heights and Color-Splitting Rainbows Speaker: Ursula Whitcher, American Mathematical Society Abstract: Adinkras are decorated graphs that encapsulate information about conjectural relationships between fundamental particles in physics. If we color the edges of an Adinkra with a rainbow of shades in a specific order, we obtain a special curve that we can study usingalgebraic […]

  • Continued fractions, directed graphs, and defining spectral triples on Effros-Shen AF algebras (Samantha Brooker, Arizona State University)

    Estella 2141 610 N College Ave, Claremont, United States

    The Effros-Shen algebra corresponding to an irrational number $\theta$ can be described by an inductive sequence of direct sums of matrix algebras, where the continued fraction expansion of $\theta$ encodes the dimensions of the summands, and how the matrix algebras at the nth level fit into the summands at the (n+1)th level. In recent work, […]

  • On the Cox ring of a weighted projective plane blown-up at a point (Javier Gonzalez Anaya, HMC)

    Roberts North 102, CMC

    The Cox ring of a projective variety is the ring of all its meromorphic functions, together with a grading of geometric origin. Determining whether this ring is finitely generated is a challenging task, even for simple examples. In this talk, we will discuss our efforts to tackle this problem for a specific class of varieties, […]

  • What can chicken nuggets tell us about symmetric functions, positive polynomials, random norms, and AF algebras? (Stephan Garcia, Pomona)

    Roberts North 102, CMC

    A simple question about chicken nuggets connects everything from analysis and combinatorics to probability theory and computer-aided design.  With tools from complex, harmonic, and functional analysis, probability theory, algebraic combinatorics, and spline theory, we answer many asymptotic questions about factorization lengths in numerical semigroups.  Our results yield uncannily accurate predictions, along with unexpected results about […]