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Plenary Speakers
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Hee
Oh Professor of Mathematics The Mathematics Department,
Brown University Ph.D, Yale
University, 1997 B.Sc., Seoul National University
1992 Professor, Brown University, July
2006-present Professor, California Institute of Technology,
April 2006-August 2007 Associate Professor with tenure,
California Institute of Technology, June 2003-March
2006 Assistant Professor, Princeton University, Sep
1999-June 2003 Golda Meir Postdoctoral Fellow, The Hebrew
University, Oct 1998-June 1999 Visiting Assistant
Professor, Oklahoma State University, Aug 1997-May
1998
| Plenary Lecture
- 1 | 10:00-10:50, December 16 (Wed), 2009 Speaker :
Hee Oh (Brown University) |
Chair : Georgia Benkart (University of
Wisconsin) |
| Counting circles and Ergodic theory of Kleinian
groups |
| There
are many interesting examples of Kleinian groups whose limit sets on
the unit sphere provide circle packings. For instance, one can
obtain Sierpinski curves or Apollonian gaskets in this
way. Given such a circle packing on the unit sphere, we
discuss how the ergodic theory of Kleinian groups can be used to
answer the question "How many circles are of radius at
least r as r tends to 0?" |
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Terence
Tao Professor of Mathematics The Department of
Mathematics, UCLA Ph. D., Princeton
University, 1996 M. Sc., Flinders University,
1992 B. Sc., (Hons), Flinders University,
1991 Honourary Professor, ANU,
2001-2003 Full Professor, UCLA, 2000-present Visiting
Professor, UNSW, 2000 CMI Long-term Prize Fellow, Clay
Mathematical Institute, 2001-2003 Assistant Professor,
UCLA, 2000 Visiting Fellow UNSW, 1999 Acting Assistant
Professor, UCLA, 1999 Member, MSRI, Fall 1997 Hedrick
Assistant Professor, UCLA, 1996-1998 Assistant Researcher,
Princeton University, 1993-1994 Assistant Researcher,
Flinders Medical Centre, 1992-1994 Terence
Tao was born in Adelaide, Australia in 1975. Tao's areas of
research include harmonic analysis, PDE, combinatorics, and
number theory. He has received a number of awards, including
the Salem Prize in 2000, the Bochner Prize in 2002, the Fields
Medal and SASTRA Ramanujan Prize in 2006, the MacArthur
Fellowship and Ostrowski Prize in 2007, and the Waterman Award
in 2008. Terence Tao also currently holds the James and
Carol Collins chair in mathematics at UCLA, and is a Fellow of
the Royal Society, the Australian Academy of Sciences
(Corresponding Member), the National Academy of Sciences
(Foreign member), and the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences. | Plenary Lecture - 2 | 11:00-11:50, December 16 (Wed),
2009 Speaker : Terence Tao (University of
California, Los Angeles) |
| Chair : Kyewon Koh Park (Ajou
University) |
The proof of the Poincaré
conjecture |
| In a
series of three terse papers in 2003 and 2004, Grisha Perelman made
spectacular advances in the theory of the Ricci flow on 3-manifolds,
leading in particular to his celebrated proof of the Poincare
conjecture (and most of the proof of the more general geometrization
conjecture). Remarkably, while the Poincare conjecture is a purely
topological statement, the proof is almost entirely analytic in
nature, in particular relying on nonlinear PDE tools together with
estimates from Riemannian geometry to establish the result. In
this talk we discuss some of the ingredients used in the proof, and
sketch a high-level outline of the argument. |
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Bumsig
Kim Professor of Mathematics School of Mathematics,
Korea Institute for Advanced Study Ph. D., in
Mathematics, University of California at Berkeley, 1996 B.
S., in Mathematics, Seoul National University 1989
Professor, Korea Institute for Advanced Study,
2003-present Associate Professor, Pohang University of
Science and Technology, 2001-2003 Assistant Professor,
Pohang University of Science and Technology,
1999-2001 Visiting Research Assistant Professor, University
of California at Davis, 1997-1999 Postdoctoral Fellow,
Mittag-Leffler Institute,
1996-1997 | Plenary Lecture -
3 | 11:00-11:50, December 17 (Thur),
2009 Speaker : Bumsig Kim (Korea Institute for Advanced
Study) |
Chair : Yong Seung Cho (Ewha Womans
University) |
| Stable quasi-maps to GIT
quotients |
| A virtually smooth algebraic stack generalizes the
notion of an algebraic manifold and is still good enough to do
geometry. In particular, the constructions of moduli spaces as
stacks are much easier and even more desired. I will show some
examples, including one which I wanted for a long time. The latter
is joint work with Ciocan-Fontanine and Maulik. |
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YoungJu Choie Professor of
Mathematics Department of Mathematics, Pohang University of
Science and Technology Ph. D., Temple
University, PA, 1986 B. S., Ewha-Woman's University,
1982 Visiting Professor, Stanford
University, Palo Alto, CA, USA, 2005 Visiting scholar,
University of Cambridge, England, 1995 Professor, POSTECH,
Korea, 1990-present Assistant Professor, University of
Colorado, Boulder, U.S.A., 1989-1990 Visiting Assistant
Professor, University of Maryland, U.S.A.,
1988-1990 Lecturer, Ohio State University, Columbus,
U.S.A.,
1986-1988 |
Plenary Lecture - 4 | 13:30-14:20, December 17 (Thur),
2009 Speaker : YoungJu Choie (Pohang University of Science
and Technology) |
Chair : Myung-Hwan Kim (Seoul National
University)
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| Not quite modular |
Counting
branched coverings of Riemann surfaces, fixing base surface and a
ramification type, is called the Hurwitz problem. It turns out that
the generating functions of counting branched coverings with various
ramification types have a quasi-modular property. These are
spaces of functions not quite modular, but still have various
arithmetic properties. Mock modular forms, Eichler integrals
and Quasimodular forms are such examples. We show that there is
a systematic way to study such a generating function,
namely, a quasi-modular form. The parallel theories, such as
Hecke operator, L-functions and connection with various
forms, similar to those of modular forms can be
developed. It turns out that this space is isomorphic to that
of the vector valued forms with symmetric power
representations. |
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James McKernan Norbert-Wiener
Professor of Mathematics Massachusetts Institute of
Technology James McKernan was
born in London, England in 1964. He received his BA in
mathematics from Cambridge University in 1985, whilst
attending Trinity College, and his PhD in mathematics from
Harvard University under the supervision of Joseph Harris in
1991. He then held temporary positions at the University of
Utah, 1991-1993, University of Texas, at Austin 1993-1994, and
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater 1994-1995. He joined the
faculty at the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1995
and the faculty at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
2007, where he is Norbert-Wiener Professor of Mathematics. In
2007 he received a Clay Research award and in 2009 the Cole
Prize in Algebra. His research interests are in algebraic
geometry, especially birational geometry and the
classification of algebraic varieties.
| Plenary Lecture - 5 |
11:00-11:50, December 19 (Sat), 2009 Speaker :
James McKernan (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) |
Chair : Sijong Kwak (Korea Advanced Institute of
Science and Technology) |
| Finite Generation of the Canonical
ring |
| Given any smooth projective variety the canonial
ring is the ring of all global holomorphic differential forms.
In this talk I will explain the geometric significance of the
canonical ring and the fact that this ring is finitely
generated. |
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Van Vu Professor of
Mathematics Mathematics Department, Rutgers
University
Ph. D., Yale University, 1998 B. S.,
Eotvos Univerisity (Budapest, Hungary),
1994
Professor II, Department of Mathematics, Rutgers
University, July 2009-present Full Professor, Department of
Mathematics, Rutgers University, September 2005-June
2009 Leader of Focus program "Arithmetic Combinatorics",
Institute for Advance Study, Fall 2007 Visiting Professor,
Institute Henry Poincare (Paris, France), June 2006-July
2006 Full Professor, Department of Mathematics, UCSD, July
2005-December 2005 Associate Professor, Department of
Mathematics, UCSD, July 2003-June 2005 Assistant Professor,
Department of Mathematics, UCSD, July 2001- June
2003 Postdoc Researcher, Theory group, Microsoft Research,
June 1999-June 2001 Member, Institute for Advance Study,
Princeton University, September 1998-June
1999
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Plenary Lecture - 6 |
13:30-14:20, December 19 (Sat), 2009 Speaker :
Van Vu (Rutgers University) |
Chair : Jeong Han Kim (National Institute For
Mathematical Science)
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| From the Littlewood-Offord problem to the Circular
Law conjecture |
| The
famous Circular Law in random matrix theory asserts that if M_n is
an n by n matrix with iid entries of mean zero and variance one,
then the empirical spectral distribution (after a proper
normalization) tends to the uniform distribution on the unit disk.
This is usually seen as the non-hermitian "brother" of the classical
Wigner semi-circle law. After a long sequence of partial results
that verified the law under various extra assumptions, the Circular
Law is now known to be true in its mot general form, due to a result
of Tao and Vu (2008). In this talk, we discuss a few main ideas of
the proof, in particular recent advances in understanding the
Littlewood-Offord problem in combinatorics. |
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Ki-ahm Lee
Tenured Associate Professor of Mathematics Department
of Mathematics, Seoul National University Ph. D.
in mathematics, Courant Institute, New York University,
September '93- September
'98 University
of Texas at Austin, Fall ¡¯97 -Summer ¡¯98 B. A. in
Mathematics, Seoul National University, March '88-February '92
Tenured Associate Professor, Seoul National
University, February '06-present Adjunct Assistant,
University of Texas at Austin, January '05-August '05
Assistant Professor, Seoul National University, December
'01-February '06 Instructor, University of Texas at
Austin, Fall '00-Fall '01 Visiting Assistant Professor,
University of California at Irvine, Fall '98-Spring
'00 | Plenary Lecture - 7 |
10:40-11:30, December 20 (Sun), 2009 Speaker : Ki-ahm Lee
(Seoul National University) |
Chair : Minkyu Kwak (Chonnam National
University) |
| Nonlinear Elliptic and Parabolic Equations:
Analysis and Applications |
In this
talk, let us introduce the important issues in the second-order
nonlinear elliptic and parabolic equations of divergence type and
non-divergence type. First, we will consider degenerate
equations where the degeneracy of the diffusion coefficient
will give us non-trivial balance between the second derivatives and
requires non-trivial understanding on the concept of derivatives and
its estimate. Another interesting class of nonlinear equation is
non-local partial differential equations like fractional Laplace
operator. The operator is given as an integral of second
differential quotients with a singular weight function, where two
points away from each other has stronger interaction than standard
diffusion. So the kernel has thicker tail than that of standard
local equations. Finally, we will consider the difficulties and
applications when the data is highly oscillating or domain has hole
like a perforated domains. We are going to discuss how to filter the
oscillation of solutions caused by the oscillation of data or
domain, and to prove the effective equation describes different
averaging on each problem. |
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Minhyong Kim
Professor of Pure Mathematics Department of
Mathematics, University College London Ph.
D. in Mathematics, Yale University, 1985-1990 B. S. in
Mathematics, Seoul National University,
1982-1985 Professor of Pure Mathematics,
University College London, 2007-present Professor, Purdue
University, 2005-2007 Professor, University of Arizona,
2004-2007 Professor, Korea Institute for Advanced Study,
2001-2002 Associate Professor, University of Arizona,
1998-2003 Assistant Professor, University of Arizona,
1995-1998 J.F. Ritt Assistant Professor, Columbia
University, 1993-1996 C. L. E. Moore Instructor,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
1990-1993 | Plenary Lecture -
8 | 11:40-12:30, December 20 (Sun),
2009 Speaker : Minhyong Kim (University
College London) |
Chair : Jae-Hyun Yang (Inha
University) |
| Diophantine geometry and Galois
Theory |
| In his
manuscripts from the 1980's Grothendieck proposed ideas that have
been interpreted variously as embedding the theory of schemes into
either |
| -group
theory and higher-dimensional
generalizations; |
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homotopy theory. |
| It was suggested, moreover, that such a framework would
have profound implications for the study of Diophantine problems. In
this talk, we will discuss mostly the little bit of progress made on
this last point using some mildly non-abelian motives associated to
hyperbolic curves. |
Public Lecturer
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Frank
Morgan Webster Atwell ¡®21 Professor of
Mathematics Department of Mathematics and Statistics,
Williams College
PhD, Princeton University, 1977
MA, Princeton University, 1976 SB, MIT,
1974
Webster Atwell ¡®21 Professor of Mathematics,
Williams College, 2003-present Dennis Meenan ¡®54 Third
Century Professor of Mathematics, Williams College,
1997-2003 ScD (honorary), Cedar Crest College,
1995 Chair, Williams College, 1988-94 Cecil and Ida
Green Career Development Chair, MIT, 1985-86 Chairman,
Undergraduate Mathematics Office, MIT, 1979-82 C.L.E.
Moore Instructor, MIT,
1977-79
| Public Lecture | 18:00-18:50, December 16 (Wed),
2009 Speaker : Frank Morgan (Williams
College) Chair :
Jaigyoung Choe (Korea Institute for Advanced
Study) From Soap Bubbles to the Poincaré
Conjecture A round soap bubble provides the
least-perimeter way to enclose a given volume of air, as was
conjectured by the Ancient Greeks and proved mathematically by
Schwarz in 1884. Similarly the double bubble that forms when two
soap bubbles come together provides the least-perimeter way to
enclose and separate two given volumes of air, although that was not
proved until 2002 by Hutchings, Morgan, Ritoré, and Ros. Such
"isoperimetric" theorems have played any important role throughout
mathematics, including Perelman's 2003 proof of the Poincaré
Conjecture. The talk will include soap bubble demonstrations, recent
results by undergraduates, and open
questions. |
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