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Plenary Speakers / Conférenciers principaux
- JAMES ARTHUR, Department of Mathematics, University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario
Universal groups in the theory of automorphic forms
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It is believed that there are universal groups that govern fundamental
processes in number theory, automorphic forms and algebraic geometry.
Some such groups are well known, while others are only hypothetical.
We shall use these groups as a means of discussing some of the basic
questions in the theory of automorphic forms.
- RENE CARMONA, ORFE, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Mathematical challenges of the energy markets
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The complexity of the instruments traded in the energy markets,
together with the extreme volatility of electricity prices offer
challenging problems to the mathematicians. We shall review some of the
practical issues with the gas and power markets (spark spread options
and plant valuation, gas storage, weather derivatives, swing options),
and we shall formulate the corresponding mathematical problems. After
discussing the mathematics involved in the existing solutions, we will
concentrate on options with multiple American exercises, and we will
present new mathematical results for the pricing of these options.
- VICTOR GUILLEMIN, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
Cutting and gluing in symplectic geometry
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Surgery operations like ``connected sum'' have been standard tools in
differential geometry for many years. In the last decade two operations
of this type: ``cutting'' and ``gluing'' have become standard tools in
symplectic geometry as well. In this lecture I will describe a number
of recent developments in which these operations have played a role,
among them the solution of the ``quantization commutes with reduction''
conjecture, an elementary proof of the Kirwan convexity theorem and the
construction of many interesting examples of non-Kaehlerizable
symplectic manifolds.
- MACIEJ ZWORSKI, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Quantum resonances in chaotic scattering
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In mathematical work on quantum mechanics we are often interested in
the density of states in the semi-classical limit. The work of
Sjöstrand on modified Weyl upper bounds showed a relation between the
density of states in quantum chaotic scattering and the dimension of
the classical trapped set.
This work motivated recent rigorous and numerical work on quantum
resonances in chaotic scattering, in particular estimates on classical
dynamical zeta functions for Schottky groups, where the trapped set is
related to the limit set of the group.
In my talk I will explain these concepts and present the recent
numerical results in potential, obstacle, and geometric scattering
(joint work with L. Guillopé, K. Lin, W. Lu, and S. Sridhar).
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