The Undergraduate Mathematics Society hosts their first talk of the semester this evening. Alex Blumenthal will be speaking about the applications of ergodic theory to additive number theory, plus some cool stuff about primes. Bwog also notes that there will be FREE FOOD from 7 in 508 Math before the talk at 7:30.
Full event details after the jump.
Applications of Ergodic Theory to Additive Number Theory — Alex Blumenthal
Under what conditions will a subset of the integers contain arithmetic progressions of arbitrary length? Szemeredi’s theorem provides a partial answer to this question. In fact, as of 2004, we know that the primes are such a subset, due to the theorem of Green and Tao.
In this talk, I will present an ergodic-theoretic proof of Szemeredi’s theorem, which is formally used to prove Green and Tao’s result. The punchline is that ergodic theory, a field motivated by problems in statistical mechanics, has something deep to say about number theory. The talk will emphasize the transition from number theoretical questions to the theory of dynamical systems. Along the way, I will discuss several applications of ergodic theory to number theoretic statements: examples include results from Weyl’s theory of exponential sums, a simple proof of Van der Waerden’s theorem, and the deep results of Hindeman concerning the existence of IP-systems in subsets of the integers of upper banach density.
I will assume no background in ergodic theory, but a basic understanding of [point-set] topology (metrics, compactness) and set theory would be useful.
8 Comments
@Anonymous Woo Alex!
@OMG Ok, this is going to sound weird, and I’m not one to usually bwog comment but Alex Blumenthal is the absolute hottest math major I’ve ever met. I ran into him at a Potluck once last semester, and there he was baking cookies AND talking math. Not to give myself away, but as a female math major (we exist!), I swooned.
@yeah thanks alex perry
@hmmm I guess the speaker must have some connections to “non-nerds” that previous speakers at the Undergraduate Math Society have lacked. They have these gatherings every week if I’m not mistaken…
@frsutrated 2 this event is for nErDS!!
@WOW! Get there early, it’s sure to be packed!
@Anonymous lol @ humanities major
@frustrated i don’t understand anything after the jump