|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All departments
This is Part 2 of a two-volume set. Since Oscar Zariski organized a
meeting in 1954, there has been a major algebraic geometry meeting
every decade: Woods Hole (1964), Arcata (1974), Bowdoin (1985),
Santa Cruz (1995), and Seattle (2005). The American Mathematical
Society has supported these summer institutes for over 50 years.
Their proceedings volumes have been extremely influential,
summarizing the state of algebraic geometry at the time and
pointing to future developments. The most recent Summer Institute
in Algebraic Geometry was held July 2015 at the University of Utah
in Salt Lake City, sponsored by the AMS with the collaboration of
the Clay Mathematics Institute. This volume includes surveys
growing out of plenary lectures and seminar talks during the
meeting. Some present a broad overview of their topics, while
others develop a distinctive perspective on an emerging topic.
Topics span both complex algebraic geometry and arithmetic
questions, specifically, analytic techniques, enumerative geometry,
moduli theory, derived categories, birational geometry, tropical
geometry, Diophantine questions, geometric representation theory,
characteristic $p$ and $p$-adic tools, etc. The resulting articles
will be important references in these areas for years to come.
This is Part 1 of a two-volume set. Since Oscar Zariski organized a
meeting in 1954, there has been a major algebraic geometry meeting
every decade: Woods Hole (1964), Arcata (1974), Bowdoin (1985),
Santa Cruz (1995), and Seattle (2005). The American Mathematical
Society has supported these summer institutes for over 50 years.
Their proceedings volumes have been extremely influential,
summarizing the state of algebraic geometry at the time and
pointing to future developments. The most recent Summer Institute
in Algebraic Geometry was held July 2015 at the University of Utah
in Salt Lake City, sponsored by the AMS with the collaboration of
the Clay Mathematics Institute. This volume includes surveys
growing out of plenary lectures and seminar talks during the
meeting. Some present a broad overview of their topics, while
others develop a distinctive perspective on an emerging topic.
Topics span both complex algebraic geometry and arithmetic
questions, specifically, analytic techniques, enumerative geometry,
moduli theory, derived categories, birational geometry, tropical
geometry, Diophantine questions, geometric representation theory,
characteristic $p$ and $p$-adic tools, etc. The resulting articles
will be important references in these areas for years to come.
The contributions in this book explore various contexts in which
the derived category of coherent sheaves on a variety determines
some of its arithmetic. This setting provides new geometric tools
for interpreting elements of the Brauer group. With a view towards
future arithmetic applications, the book extends a number of
powerful tools for analyzing rational points on elliptic curves,
e.g., isogenies among curves, torsion points, modular curves, and
the resulting descent techniques, as well as higher-dimensional
varieties like K3 surfaces. Inspired by the rapid recent advances
in our understanding of K3 surfaces, the book is intended to foster
cross-pollination between the fields of complex algebraic geometry
and number theory. Contributors: * Nicolas Addington * Benjamin
Antieau * Kenneth Ascher * Asher Auel * Fedor Bogomolov *
Jean-Louis Colliot-Thelene * Krishna Dasaratha * Brendan Hassett *
Colin Ingalls * Marti Lahoz * Emanuele Macri * Kelly McKinnie *
Andrew Obus * Ekin Ozman * Raman Parimala * Alexander Perry * Alena
Pirutka * Justin Sawon * Alexei N. Skorobogatov * Paolo Stellari *
Sho Tanimoto * Hugh Thomas * Yuri Tschinkel * Anthony
Varilly-Alvarado * Bianca Viray * Rong Zhou
Since Oscar Zariski organized a meeting in 1954, there has been a
major algebraic geometry meeting every decade: Woods Hole (1964),
Arcata (1974), Bowdoin (1985), Santa Cruz (1995), and Seattle
(2005). The American Mathematical Society has supported these
summer institutes for over 50 years. Their proceedings volumes have
been extremely influential, summarizing the state of algebraic
geometry at the time and pointing to future developments. The most
recent Summer Institute in Algebraic Geometry was held July 2015 at
the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, sponsored by the AMS with
the collaboration of the Clay Mathematics Institute. These volumes
include surveys growing out of plenary lectures and seminar talks
during the meeting. Some present a broad overview of their topics,
while others develop a distinctive perspective on an emerging
topic. Topics span both complex algebraic geometry and arithmetic
questions, specifically, analytic techniques, enumerative geometry,
moduli theory, derived categories, birational geometry, tropical
geometry, Diophantine questions, geometric representation theory,
characteristic $p$ and $p$-adic tools, etc. The resulting articles
will be important references in these areas for years to come.
The contributions in this book explore various contexts in which
the derived category of coherent sheaves on a variety determines
some of its arithmetic. This setting provides new geometric tools
for interpreting elements of the Brauer group. With a view towards
future arithmetic applications, the book extends a number of
powerful tools for analyzing rational points on elliptic curves,
e.g., isogenies among curves, torsion points, modular curves, and
the resulting descent techniques, as well as higher-dimensional
varieties like K3 surfaces. Inspired by the rapid recent advances
in our understanding of K3 surfaces, the book is intended to foster
cross-pollination between the fields of complex algebraic geometry
and number theory. Contributors: * Nicolas Addington * Benjamin
Antieau * Kenneth Ascher * Asher Auel * Fedor Bogomolov *
Jean-Louis Colliot-Thelene * Krishna Dasaratha * Brendan Hassett *
Colin Ingalls * Marti Lahoz * Emanuele Macri * Kelly McKinnie *
Andrew Obus * Ekin Ozman * Raman Parimala * Alexander Perry * Alena
Pirutka * Justin Sawon * Alexei N. Skorobogatov * Paolo Stellari *
Sho Tanimoto * Hugh Thomas * Yuri Tschinkel * Anthony
Varilly-Alvarado * Bianca Viray * Rong Zhou
Based on the Simons Symposia held in 2015, the proceedings in this
volume focus on rational curves on higher-dimensional algebraic
varieties and applications of the theory of curves to arithmetic
problems. There has been significant progress in this field with
major new results, which have given new impetus to the study of
rational curves and spaces of rational curves on K3 surfaces and
their higher-dimensional generalizations. One main recent insight
the book covers is the idea that the geometry of rational curves is
tightly coupled to properties of derived categories of sheaves on
K3 surfaces. The implementation of this idea led to proofs of
long-standing conjectures concerning birational properties of
holomorphic symplectic varieties, which in turn should yield new
theorems in arithmetic. This proceedings volume covers these new
insights in detail.
Algebraic geometry, central to pure mathematics, has important
applications in such fields as engineering, computer science,
statistics and computational biology, which exploit the
computational algorithms that the theory provides. Users get the
full benefit, however, when they know something of the underlying
theory, as well as basic procedures and facts. This book is a
systematic introduction to the central concepts of algebraic
geometry most useful for computation. Written for advanced
undergraduate and graduate students in mathematics and researchers
in application areas, it focuses on specific examples and restricts
development of formalism to what is needed to address these
examples. In particular, it introduces the notion of Grobner bases
early on and develops algorithms for almost everything covered. It
is based on courses given over the past five years in a large
interdisciplinary programme in computational algebraic geometry at
Rice University, spanning mathematics, computer science,
biomathematics and bioinformatics.
Providing an overview of the state of the art on rationality
questions in algebraic geometry, this volume gives an update on the
most recent developments. It offers a comprehensive introduction to
this fascinating topic, and will certainly become an essential
reference for anybody working in the field. Rationality problems
are of fundamental importance both in algebra and algebraic
geometry. Historically, rationality problems motivated significant
developments in the theory of abelian integrals, Riemann surfaces
and the Abel-Jacobi map, among other areas, and they have strong
links with modern notions such as moduli spaces, Hodge theory,
algebraic cycles and derived categories. This text is aimed at
researchers and graduate students in algebraic geometry.
Based on the Simons Symposia held in 2015, the proceedings in this
volume focus on rational curves on higher-dimensional algebraic
varieties and applications of the theory of curves to arithmetic
problems. There has been significant progress in this field with
major new results, which have given new impetus to the study of
rational curves and spaces of rational curves on K3 surfaces and
their higher-dimensional generalizations. One main recent insight
the book covers is the idea that the geometry of rational curves is
tightly coupled to properties of derived categories of sheaves on
K3 surfaces. The implementation of this idea led to proofs of
long-standing conjectures concerning birational properties of
holomorphic symplectic varieties, which in turn should yield new
theorems in arithmetic. This proceedings volume covers these new
insights in detail.
This book features recent developments in a rapidly growing area at
the interface of higher-dimensional birational geometry and
arithmetic geometry. It focuses on the geometry of spaces of
rational curves, with an emphasis on applications to arithmetic
questions. Classically, arithmetic is the study of rational or
integral solutions of diophantine equations and geometry is the
study of lines and conics. From the modern standpoint, arithmetic
is the study of rational and integral points on algebraic varieties
over nonclosed fields. A major insight of the 20th century was that
arithmetic properties of an algebraic variety are tightly linked to
the geometry of rational curves on the variety and how they vary in
families. This collection of solicited survey and research papers
is intended to serve as an introduction for graduate students and
researchers interested in entering the field, and as a source of
reference for experts working on related problems. Topics that will
be addressed include: birational properties such as rationality,
unirationality, and rational connectedness, existence of rational
curves in prescribed homology classes, cones of rational curves on
rationally connected and Calabi-Yau varieties, as well as related
questions within the framework of the Minimal Model Program.
This book features recent developments in a rapidly growing area at
the interface of higher-dimensional birational geometry and
arithmetic geometry. It focuses on the geometry of spaces of
rational curves, with an emphasis on applications to arithmetic
questions. Classically, arithmetic is the study of rational or
integral solutions of diophantine equations and geometry is the
study of lines and conics. From the modern standpoint, arithmetic
is the study of rational and integral points on algebraic varieties
over nonclosed fields. A major insight of the 20th century was that
arithmetic properties of an algebraic variety are tightly linked to
the geometry of rational curves on the variety and how they vary in
families. This collection of solicited survey and research papers
is intended to serve as an introduction for graduate students and
researchers interested in entering the field, and as a source of
reference for experts working on related problems. Topics that will
be addressed include: birational properties such as rationality,
unirationality, and rational connectedness, existence of rational
curves in prescribed homology classes, cones of rational curves on
rationally connected and Calabi-Yau varieties, as well as related
questions within the framework of the Minimal Model Program.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R336
R283
Discovery Miles 2 830
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R336
R283
Discovery Miles 2 830
|