This page list all events and seminars that take place in the department this week. Please use the form below to choose a different week or date range.

AGNT

TBA

Jun 19, 12:10—13:10, 2023, -101

Speaker

David Ter-Borch Gram Lilienfeldt (HUJI)

Abstract

The Gross-Zagier formula equates (up to an explicit non-zero constant) the central value of the first derivative of the Rankin-Selberg L-function of a weight 2 eigenform and the theta series of a class group character of an imaginary quadratic field (satisfying the Heegner hypothesis) with the height of a Heegner point on the corresponding modular curve. This equality is a key ingredient in the proof of the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture for elliptic curves over the rationals in analytic rank 0 and 1. Two important generalizations present themselves: to allow eigenforms of higher weight, and to allow Hecke characters of infinite order. The former one is due to Shou-Wu Zhang. The latter one is the subject of a joint work in progress with Ari Shnidman and requires the calculation of the Beilinson-Bloch heights of generalized Heegner cycles. In this talk, I will report on the calculation of the archimedean local heights of these cycles.

Colloquium

Eigenvalues of the hyperbolic Laplacian and Random Matrix Theory

Jun 20, 14:30—15:30, 2023, Math -101

Speaker

Zeev Rudnick (Tel Aviv University)

Abstract

I will discuss some of the interactions between number theory and the spectral theory of the Laplacian. Some have very classical background, such as the connection with lattice point problems. Others are newer, including connections with Random Matrix Theory, the zeros of the Riemann zeta function, and the work of Maryam Mirzakhani on the moduli space of hyperbolic surfaces.

BGU Probability and Ergodic Theory (PET) seminar

Fourier decay for smooth images of self-similar measures

Jun 22, 11:10—12:00, 2023, -101

Speaker

Amir Algom (University of Haifa)

Abstract

Kaufman (1984) and later Mosquera-Shmerkin (2018) showed that Bernoulli convolutions exhibit fast Fourier decay when perturbed by a smooth non-linear map. This is remarkable, since by a classical Theorem of Erdos (1939) many Bernoulli convolutions don’t have Fourier decay at all. We will present an extension of this result to all self-similar measures: Any smooth non-linear perturbation of a self-similar measure enjoys fast (polynomial) Fourier decay. Joint with Yuanyang Chang, Meng Wu, and Yu-Liang Wu.


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