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Integral Points, Rational Curves and Entire Curves on Projective Varieties

$35,000FY2013MPSNSF

Suny At Stony Brook, Stony Brook NY

Investigators

Abstract

The month-long conference, "Rational Points, Rational Curves, and Entire Holomorphic Curves on Varieties", June 3-28, 2013, will be held at the Centre de Recherches Mathematiques in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The URL for the conference website is as follows. http://www.crm.umontreal.ca/2013/Integral13/index_e.php The proposed activity is a summer school of 2-3 weeks comprised of a dozen mini-courses, followed by a week-long international workshop. There have been recent advances in seemingly separate fields: classification of complex projective varieties, existence and properties of solutions of Diophantine equations, and analytic behavior of entire curves in projective varieties. The moment is ripe for a summer school and workshop bringing together experts to synthesize these results, and train junior mathematicians in the new techniques. With the groundwork laid, we will emphasize open problems that seem amenable to solution: the holomorphic Lang conjecture about entire curves in general type varieties, potential density of rational points and rational curves on Calabi-Yau varieties, and the Grothendieck-Katz conjecture on algebraic solutions of differential equations. Systems of polynomial equations arise in all areas of mathematics, as well as areas of science and engineering as disparate as genomics and robot design. The oldest, and still most important, problem in this area is that of finding solutions to polynomial systems, particularly solutions that are fractions of whole numbers. Although surprising, this problem is closely connected to the related problem of interpolating any two given solutions by a system of solutions that are the outputs of a fraction of polynomials, or, more generally, an entire analytic function (the functions most amenable to study via "power series expansion"). There have been recent breakthroughs on both of these problems separately, as well as the interaction between them. This conference will feature training courses for young mathematicians, discussions with experts, and a public outreach lecture, as well as a planned volume to disseminate this work to an even broader audience.

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