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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 volume contains the proceedings of the conference Local and
Global Methods in Algebraic Geometry, held from May 12-15, 2016, at
the University of Illinois at Chicago, in honor of Lawrence Ein's
60th birthday. The articles cover a broad range of topics in
algebraic geometry and related fields, including birational
geometry and moduli theory, analytic and positive characteristic
methods, geometry of surfaces, singularity theory, hyper-Kahler
geometry, rational points, and rational curves.
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 algebraic geometry community has a tradition of running a
summer research institute every ten years. During these influential
meetings a large number of mathematicians from around the world
convene to overview the developments of the past decade and to
outline the most fundamental and far-reaching problems for the
next. The meeting is preceded by a Bootcamp aimed at graduate
students and young researchers. This volume collects ten surveys
that grew out of the Bootcamp, held July 6-10, 2015, at University
of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. These papers give succinct and
thorough introductions to some of the most important and exciting
developments in algebraic geometry in the last decade. Included are
descriptions of the striking advances in the Minimal Model Program,
moduli spaces, derived categories, Bridgeland stability, motivic
homotopy theory, methods in characteristic $p$ and Hodge theory.
Surveys contain many examples, exercises and open problems, which
will make this volume an invaluable and enduring resource for
researchers looking for new directions.
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.
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