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Factoring translates of polynomials (Arvind Suresh, University of Arizona – Tucson)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

Given a degree d polynomial f(x) in Q, consider the subset S_f  of Q consisting of rational numbers t for which the translated polynomial f(x) - t factors completely in Q. For example, if f is linear or quadratic then S_f is always infinite, but if degree of f is at least 3, then interesting […]

A tale of two worlds: parking functions & reduction algebras (Dwight Anderson Williams II, Pomona)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

"A Tale of Two Cities" is a novel told in three books/parts. Here we describe three projects related both to published work and ongoing pieces: PROJECT 1: In the world of combinatorics, parking functions are combinatorial objects arising from the situation of parking cars under a parking strategy. In this part of the talk, we […]

Properties of redistricting Markov chains (Sarah Cannon, CMC)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

Markov chains have become widely-used to generate random political districting plans. These random districting plans can be used to form a baseline for comparison, and any proposed districting plans that differ significantly from this baseline can be flagged as potentially gerrymandered. However, very little is rigorously known about these Markov chains - Are they irreducible? […]

On the geometry of lattice extensions (Max Forst, CGU)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

Given a lattice L, an extension of L is a lattice M of strictly greater rank so that L is equal to the intersection of the subspace spanned by L with M. In this talk, we will discus constructions of such lattice extensions with particular geometric invariants of M, such as the determinant, covering radius […]

Recent developments on the slice rank polynomial method with applications (Mohamed Omar, HMC)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

The slice rank polynomial method, motivated by groundbreaking work of Croot, Lev and Pach and refined by Tao, has opened the door to the resolution of many problems in extremal combinatorics. We survey these results and discuss contributions in several of the speaker's recent papers.

Spinning switches on a wreath product (Peter Kagey, HMC)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

This talk discusses a puzzle called “Spinning Switches,” based on a problem popularized by Martin Gardner in his February 1979 column of “Mathematical Games". This puzzle can be generalized to a two-player game on a finite wreath products. This talk will provide a classification of several families of these generalized puzzles, including a full classification […]

Arithmetical structures (Luis Garcia Puente, Colorado College)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

An arithmetical structure on a finite, connected graph G without loops is given by an assignment of positive integers to the vertices such that, at each vertex, the integer there is a divisor of the sum of the integers at adjacent vertices, counted with multiplicity if the graph is not simple. Alternatively,  an arithmetical structure […]

Kriz’s theorem via dynamics of linear operators (Yunied Puig de Dios, CMC)

Davidson Lecture Hall, CMC 340 E 9th St, Claremont, CA, United States

The existence of a set $A\subset \N_0$ of positive upper Banach density such that $A-A:=\{m-n:m, n\in A, m>n\}$ does not contain a set of the form $S-S$ with $S$ a piecewise syndetic is in essence the content of a popular result due to K\v r\'{i}\v z in 1987. Since then at least four different proofs […]