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June 2009
2009: January,
February,
March,
April,
May,
June,
July,
August,
September,
October,
November,
December
2010
Non-UW Conferences Main Page
| June 1, 2009 |
through
6/5/09 Münster, GERMANY |
Geometry
and Topology at Münster Universität, 2009 Confirmed
Speakers:
Martin Bridson, University of Oxford
Gunnar Carlsson, Stanford University
Tobias Colding, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Yakov Eliashberg, Stanford University
David Gabai, Princeton University
Sœren Galatius, Stanford University
Lars Hesselholt, Nagoya University
Nigel Higson, Pennsylvania State University
Mike Hopkins, Harvard University
Helmut Hofer, New York University
Ilya Kapovich, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Matthias Kreck, Hausdorff Research Institute for Mathematics
John Lott, University of Michigan
Ib Madsen, University of Copenhagen
Nicolas Monod, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Pedro Ontaneda, University of Binghamton
Stefan Schwede, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Ronald Stern, University of California at Irvine
Stephan Stolz, University of Notre Dame
Peter Teichner, University of California at Berkeley
Karen Vogtmann, Cornell University
Michael Weiss, University of Aberdeen
http://www.math.ku.dk/~erik/muenster/
|
| June 1, 2009 |
through
6/5/09 Grenoble, FRANCE |
International Conference on Spectral Theory and Geometry
A birthday celebration for Pierre Bérnard and Sylvestre Gallot.
http://www.math.ku.dk/~erik/muenster/
|
| June 4, 2009 |
through
6/5/09 Seattle, WA |
Conference on Statistics and the Social Sciences
CSSS was founded in 1999 to galvanize research and teaching on
the interface between statistics and the social sciences, and was
the first center of its kind in the United States. To celebrate its
10th Anniversary, a conference has been organized for June 4-5,
2009, to be held at the University of Washington, Seattle,
Washington in the Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall, room 225.
Registration is required.
http://www.csss.washington.edu/Anniversary/
|
| June 7, 2009 |
through
6/12/09 Trento, ITALY |
Sixth School on Analysis and Geometry in Metric Spaces
The aim of the school is to offer an outline of the present state
of research concerning geometric measure theory on Carnot-Caratheodory
groups and on more general metric spaces. Analysis and Geometry on
these structures has been object of extensive research in the last
few years, with applications ranging from degenerate elliptic
equations to optimal control theory and differential geometry.
It is intention of the organizers to put together young
researchers and well-known researchers active in the field and to
encourage informal discussion on current research trends and
developments in the area. Young researchers are encouraged to
participate: it is possible to support some of them upon request.
http://www.csss.washington.edu/Anniversary/
|
| June 8, 2009 |
through
6/12/09 Bowling Green, OH |
Lattice-Ordered Groups and MV-Algebras: A Workshop for New Faculty and Graduate Students
The conference will be a celebration of the work and achievement of
Prof. W. Charles Holland. The main themes of the conference will
center around the theories of lattice-ordered groups and
MV-algebras.
http://personal.bgsu.edu/~warrenb/Workshop/Conference09.html
|
| June 8, 2009 |
through
6/19/09 Princeton, NJ |
Program
for Women and Mathematics: Geometric PDE A Program of
the Institute for Advanced Study and Princeton University
The program brings together research mathematicians with
undergraduate and graduate students for an intensive 11-day workshop
on the campus of the Institute for Advanced Study which is designed
to address issues of gender imbalance in mathematics. Founded in
1994, the program includes lectures and seminars on a focused
mathematical topic, mentoring, discussions on peer relations, an
introduction to career opportunities and a women in sciences
seminar.
Application Deadline: February 20, 2008.
Program support provided by the National Science Foundation and The
Starr Foundation.
http://www.math.ias.edu/wam
|
| June 8, 2009 |
through
6/26/09 Pittsburgh, PA |
Carnegie Mellon Summer School in Logic and Form Epistemology
There is a long tradition of fruitful interaction between philosophy
and the sciences. Logic and statistics emerged, historically, from
combined philosophical and scientific inquiry into the nature of
mathematical and scientific inference; and the modern conceptions of
psychology, linguistics, and computer science are the results of
sustained reflection on the nature of mind, language, and
computation. In today's climate of disciplinary specialization,
however, foundational reflection is becoming increasingly rare. As a
result, developments in the sciences are often conceptually
ill-founded, and philosophical debates often lack scientific
substance.
In 2009, the Department of Philosophy at Carnegie Mellon
University will hold a three-week summer school in logic and formal
epistemology for promising undergraduates in philosophy,
mathematics, computer science, linguistics, and other sciences. The
goals are to introduce promising students to cross-disciplinary
fields of research at an early stage in their career; and forge
lasting links between the various disciplines.
The summer school will be held from Monday, June 8 to Friday, June
26, 2009. There will be morning and afternoon lectures and daily
problem sessions, as well as planned outings and social events.
Registration deadline: March 15, 2009
http://www.phil.cmu.edu/summerschool
|
| June 8, 2009 |
through
7/3/09 Vancouver, B.C.
CANADA
 |
PIMS 2009
Summer School in Probability The summer school will
consist of two advanced graduate courses. The courses will be as
follows:
Stochastic Population Systems - Don Dawson
Statistical Mechanics and the Renormalisation Group - David
Brydges
Each course will include 30 hours of lectures. Course credit will be
available for graduate students in Western Canada through the
Western Deans' Protocol. Those interested in attending (graduate
students, postdocs and faculty members) should fill in the online
registration form, as space will be limited.
Registration Deadline: December 31, 2008
http://www.math.ubc.ca/~db5d/SummerSchool09/index.html
|
| June 13, 2009 |
through
6/19/09 Snowbird, UT |
AMS
Mathematics Research Community: Mathematical Challenges of
Relativity Organizers:
Mihalis Dafermos (University of Cambridge);
Alexandru Ionescu (University of Wisconsin, Madison);
Sergiu Klainerman (Princeton University), Chair;
Richard Schoen (Stanford University)
Application Deadline: March 2, 2009
http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/mrc.html
|
| June 14, 2009 |
through
6/19/09 Cortona, ITALY |
The Interplay of Algebra and Geometry:
A conference in honour of Corrado De ConciniThis
one-week conference, which is being organized to honor the 60th
birthday of Prof. Corrado De Concini, intends to present some of the
most important and recent developments in the following fields:
- Complete symmetric varieties and wonderful compactifications;
- Models of subspace arrangements and box splines;
- Quantum groups;
- Representation theory and Invariant theory;
- Cohomology of Artin and braid groups.
http://www.dm.unipi.it/cortona2009 |
| June 15, 2009 |
through
7/3/09 Grenoble, FRANCE |
Summer School in Mathematics: Optimal Transportation Theory and Applications
The aim is to present recent developments in optimal transportation
and also its applications in biology, mathematical physics, and
information theory.
http://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/-2009-.html
|
| June 15, 2009 |
through
7/10/09 Honolulu, HI |
Clay
Mathematics Institute Summer School 2009 Many advances
on the algebraic side of number theory in the last 15 years (such as
the solutions of the Shimura-Taniyama conjecture, Sato-Tate
conjecture and Serre's conjecture, as well as decisive progress on
the Fontaine-Mazur conjecture and Main Conjectures for modular
forms) have relied in an essential way on improvements in the theory
of Galois representations. For example, such improvements have
enabled the local and global aspects of modularity lifting theorems
to be extended far beyond the traditional 2-dimensional case over
the rational numbers, and have led to generalizations of the
"classical" theory of p-adic modular forms in a way
that makes more effective use of representation theory and geometry
to obtain results on the arithmetic of L-values.
The aim of the tree main courses is to present an overview of
many of these ideas and applications, aimed at advanced graduate
students and postdocs with a strong background in number theory,
Galois cohomology, and basic algebraic geometry. One course will
focus entirely on local problems (p-adic representations of
Galois groups of p-adic fields), a second course will have a
more global flavor (Galois deformation theory and global
applications), and a third (on L-values) will rely on the other two
courses. During the final week of the school there will be
mini-courses on some more specialized topics.
Application Deadline: February 15, 2009
http://www.claymath.org/summerschool
|
| June 15, 2009 |
through
7/18/09 Bonn, GERMANY |
Felix Klein Lectures 2009:
Cluster Algebras, Cluster Categories and Periodicity
Cluster algebras were invented by S. Fomin and A. Zelevinsky at the
beginning of this decade in a projet whose aim it was to develop a
combinatorial framework for the study of total positivity in
algebraic groups and of canonical bases in quantum groups. It was
soon recognized that the combinatorics of cluster algebras also
appeared in a large spectrum of other subjects, for example in
Poisson geometry, higher Teichmuller theory, discrete dynamical
systems, algebraic geometry, in combinatorics and notably the study
of combinatorial polyhedra and, last not least, in the
representation theory of quivers and finite-dimensional algebras.
In these lectures, we will give an introduction to cluster algebras
and some of the many links to other subjects. We will then
concentrate on the (additive) categorification of cluster algebras
via cluster categories. These are certain triangulated Calabi-Yau
categories obtained from categories of quiver representations. They
can be constructed as orbit categories or as subquotients of derived
categories of certain dg algebras, the Ginzburg algebras. Cluster
categories allow one to give explicit solutions to the recurrence
equations defining cluster algebras and thus to obtain conceptual
proofs of some purely combinatorial conjectures about them. We will
illustrate this by sketching a proof of the so-called perodicity
conjecture, which originates in A. Zamolodchikov’s work in
mathematical physics in the early nineties.
http://www.hausdorff-center.uni-bonn.de/event/2009/felix_klein_lectures/ |
| June 20, 2009 |
through
6/26/09 Snowbird, UT |
AMS
Mathematics Research Community: Inverse Problems
Organizers:
Guillaume Bal (Columbia University);
Allan Greenleaf (University of Rochester);
Todd Quinto (Tufts University);
Gunther Uhlmann (University of Washington), Chair
Application Deadline: March 2, 2009
http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/mrc.html
|
| June 22, 2009 |
through
6/26/09 Huesca, SPAIN |
Topology of Algebraic Varieties
A Conference in Honor of the 60th Birthday of Anatoly Libgober
The aim of this workshop is to approach Singularity Theory the way
Professor Libgober has envisioned it. Algebraic topology, algebraic
geometry, differential topology, representation theory, knot theory,
mirror symmetry, and combinatorics combine their efforts to study
the structure of singular objects.
The conference will take place in Jaca (Huesca, Spain) in the
Pyrenees from the 22 to the 26 of June, 2009. The strategic singular
location of this ancient city in the Pyrenees will allow us to enjoy
the talks as well as the landscape.
The main topics are: Topology of singularities and related
invariants, braid groups, braid monodromy, hyperplane arrangements,
mirror symmetry, mathematical physics, singularities and algebraic
geometry, knot theory, and fundamental groups of curve complements.
http://www.math.uic.edu/~jaca2009/
|
| June 25, 2009 |
through
6/28/09 Shanghai, CHINA |
International Conference on Applied Analysis and Scientific
Computation In the past decades, tremendous progress
has been made in the fields of applied analysis and scientific
computation. Various new theories, new methods, and new algorithms
have been proposed or established recently, which have already been
demonstrated to be powerful tools for many branches of science and
engineering and have helped to solve many important problems which
previously were thought to be intractable.
This conference will provide a forum for experts in the fields of
applied analysis and scientific computation to discuss the recent
advances and exchange research ideas. It also aims to promote the
interaction between applied analysis and scientific computation.
The conference consists of plenary lectures, invited talks,
minisymposium presentations and contributed talks. The topics of
this conference include:
1. Asymptotic analysis;
2. Analysis and computations for applied nonlinear PDEs;
3. Mathematical modeling in material science, biology and
informatics;
4. Dynamical systems and numerical simulations;
5. New mathematical framework for the finite/boundary element
methods;
6. Spectral methods, analysis and applications.
http://mathsc.shnu.edu.cn/conference/index.htm
|
| June 26, 2009 |
through
6/27/09 Ljubljana, SLOVENIA |
Tomo is Sixty: A Mini Conference on Discrete Mathematics
Dedicated to the 60th anniversary of the "father" of the Slovenian
graph theory and our dear friend Professor Tomaž Pisanski.
Registration deadline: June 15, 2009 (extended)
Abstract submission deadline: June 15, 2009 (extended)
http://tomoissixty.imfm.si
|
| June 27, 2009 |
through
7/3/09 Snowbird, UT |
AMS
Mathematics Research Community: Modern Markov Chains and Their
Statistical Applications Organizers:
Persi Diaconis (Stanford University), Chair;
Jim Hobert (University of Florida);
Susan Holmes (Stanford University)
Application Deadline: March 2, 2009
http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/mrc.html
|
| June 28, 2009 |
through
7/18/09 Park City, UT |
PCMI 2009:
Research Topic: Arithmetic L-functions
Education Theme: Making Mathematical Connections
Application Deadline: January 28, 2009
http://pcmi.ias.edu/current/program.php
|
| June 29, 2009 |
through
7/4/09 Bonn, GERMANY |
Noncommutative
Geometric Methods in Global Analysis:
A conference in honor of Henri Moscovici
Global analysis is a classical area of mathematics with a number
of fundamental achievements to its credit. Noncommutative geometric
methods, such as bivariant K-theory and cyclic cohomology, provided
effective tools to analyze both classical and nonstandard spaces
arising naturally in various parts of mathematics. In the earlier
stages these methods found a number of important applications in
global analysis, topology and representation theory. Very recent
developments led to interactions with a number of other disciplines,
including number theory and mathematical physics. Currently
Noncommutative Geometry undergoes a period of vigorous growth and
has been the breeding ground of interesting new ideas and
developments.
The conference will honor Henri Moscovici on the occasion of his
65th anniversary, and in particular his fundamental contributions to
the Noncommutative Geometry, Global Analysis and Representation
Theory.
The conference will feature lectures by the leading experts in the
area. There will be a special emphasis on the interactions between
Global Analysis and Noncommutative Differential Geometry as well as
connections with the other parts of mathematics, covering both the
traditional directions and the newest trends in the subject.
http://www.hausdorff-center.uni-bonn.de/event/2009/henrifest/
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