This
program will include three weeks of short courses intended primarily
for graduate students and postdocs, with participatory seminars
as well, followed by a week-long meeting which would in part be
a celebration of the 75th birthday of Marc
Rieffel of the University of California, Berkeley, who has
been one of the most influential mathematicians in the world in
the area of noncommutative geometry and quantum groups.
Outline of Program Activities
June 3-7, 2013
Theme
Week on Noncommutative Geometry and Dynamical Systems
(organized by Hanfeng Li and Ian Putnam)
Activities during this theme week will be devoted to the interaction
between noncommutative geometry and dynamical systems,
Location: |
Stewart Library, Fields
Institute |
Speakers: |
David Kerr, University of Tokyo
Entropy, dynamics, and operator algebras |
Thierry Giordano, University
of Ottawa
Topological orbit equivalence and full groups |
June 10-14,
2013
Theme Week on Quantum Groups and Hopf Cyclic Homology Activities
(organized by Piotr M. Hajac)
Activities during this theme week will be devoted to quantum groups
and Hopf cyclic homology
Location: |
Bahen Building, Room 1190 (map) |
Speakers: |
Alfons Van Daele, University
of Leuven - Belgium
Locally compact quantum groups |
Bahram Rangipour
Hopf-Cyclic Homology: How and Why |
June 17-21, 2013
Theme Week on Noncommutative Geometry and Index Theory, Geometry
and Mathematical Physics Activities
(organized by Jonathan Rosenberg)
Activities during this theme week will be devoted to connections
between noncommutative geometry and index theory, geometry, and
mathematical physics.
Location: |
Bahen Building, Room 1170
(map) |
Speakers: |
Nigel Higson, Pennsylvania State
University
Minicourse on Noncommutative Geometry and Representation Theory
|
Paul Baum, Pennsylvania State
University
Minicourse on Index Theory |
June 24-28, 2013
Conference
on Noncommutative Geometry and Quantum Groups
Location: Monday and Tuesday, Fields Institute, Room 230
Wednesday-Friday Bahen Building, Room TBA(map)
The last week will be devoted to a capstone conference.
Program Visitors
All scientific events are open to the mathematical sciences community.
Additional support is available (thanks to NSF) to support junior
US visitors to this program. Participants in this category should
be sure to use US-flag carriers if traveling by air and to contact
Jonathan Rosenberg for further details.
Fields scientific programs are devoted to research in the mathematical
sciences, and enhanced graduate and post-doctoral training opportunities.
Part of the mandate of the Institute is to broaden and enlarge
the community, and to encourage the participation of women and
members of visible minority groups in our scientific programs.
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