Summer School 2006



Clay Mathematics Institute 2006 Summer School

Arithmetic Geometry

July 17 - August 11

at the Mathematisches Institut, Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, Germany





New-Videos of Lectures

Schedule

Program & course abstracts

Travel information


Overview

Designed for graduate students and mathematicians within five years of their Ph.D., the program will introduce the participants to modern techniques and outstanding conjectures at the interface of number theory and algebraic geometry.

The main focus is rational points on algebraic varieties over non-algebraically closed fields. Do they exist? If not, can this be proven efficiently and algorithmically? When rational points do exist, are they finite in number and can they be found effectively? When there are infinitely many rational points, how are they distributed?

For curves, a cohesive theory addressing these questions has emerged in the last few decades. Highlights include Faltings' finiteness theorem and Wiles' proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. Key techniques are drawn from the theory of elliptic curves, including modular curves and parametrizations, Heegner points, and heights.

The arithmetic of higher-dimensional varieties is equally rich, offering a complex interplay of techniques including Shimura varieties, the minimal model program, moduli spaces of curves and maps, deformation theory, Galois cohomology, harmonic analysis, and automorphic functions. However, many foundational questions about the structure of rational points remain open, and research tends to focus on properties of specific classes of varieties.

This school will offer three core courses (on curves, surfaces, and higher-dimensional varieties), supplemented by seminars on computational and algorithmic aspects of arithmetic geometry, and by mini-courses on more advanced topics.

New-Videos of Lectures

Schedule

Program & course abstracts

Travel information

Organizers

Jim Carlson, Henri Darmon, David Ellwood, Brendan Hassett and Yuri Tschinkel

Lecturers

Dan Abramovich, Fedor Bogomolov, Antoine Chambert-Loir, Ching-Li Chai, Henri Darmon, David Harari, Brendan Hassett, Dmitry Kaledin, Andrew Kresch, Yuri Manin, Frans Oort, Jason Starr, Yuri Tschinkel and others.

Funding

Funding is available to graduate students and postdoctoral fellows who are within five years of receipt of their Ph.D. Standard support amounts will include funds for local expenses and accommodation plus economy travel.

Application

Note that applications must be supported by a letter from a senior mathematician. Only complete applications will be considered. The deadline for applications is February 28, 2006. application form