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== Speakers == | == Senior People == |
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=== Project Speakers === * John Cremona (Warwick University): ''Tables of elliptic curves'' * Tim Dokchitser (Cambridge University): ''Complex L-functions and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture'' * Matthew Greenberg (University of Calgary): ''Elliptic curves over number fields'' * William Stein (University of Washington): ''Heegner points and the Gross-Zagier formula'' * Jared Weinstein (UCLA): ''Kolyvagin's Euler system'' * Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham): ''p-adic L-series and Iwasawa theory'' |
Number Theory: John Cremona (Warwick), Tim Dokchitser (Cambridge), Noam Elkies (Harvard), Matt Greenberg (Calgary), Ken Ribet (Berkeley), William Stein (University of Washington), Jared Weinstein (UCLA), Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham) TA: Robert Miller (University of Washington) Open Source: Robert Bradshaw (Google), Fernando Perez (Berkeley), Peter Norvig (Director of Research at Google), Prabhu Ramachandran (Bombay) === Project Groups === * [[/students|Student group assignments]] * [[/background|General Sage related background reading]] Projects: 1. [[/cremona|John Cremona (Warwick University): ''Tables of elliptic curves'']] 2. [[/dokchitser|Tim Dokchitser (Cambridge University): ''Complex L-functions and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture'']] 3. [[/greenberg|Matthew Greenberg (University of Calgary): ''Mod p representations associated to elliptic curves'']] 4. [[/weinstein|Jared Weinstein (UCLA) and William Stein (Univ. of Washington): ''Heegner Points and Kolyvagin's Euler system'']] 5. [[/wuthrich|Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham): ''p-adic L-series and Iwasawa theory'']] |
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=== June 25: Open Research Computation Day === * Peter Norvig (Google): TBA * Fernando Perez (Berkeley): TBA * Prabhu Ramachandran (Bombay, India): TBA |
=== Special Day -- June 25: Open Research Computation in Python === |
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== Project Groups == 1. [[/group1|Tables of elliptic curves]] 1. [[/group2|The Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture]] 1. [[/group3|Elliptic curves over number fields]] 1. [[/group4|Heegner points and Euler system]] 1. [[/group5|p-adic L-series and Iwasawa theory]] |
* Robert Bradshaw (Google) -- Cython: the best of both worlds * Jarrod Millman (Berkeley) -- The Foundation for Mathematical and Scientific Computing * Peter Norvig (Google) -- TBA * Fernando Perez (Berkeley) -- Python: an ecosystem for scientific computing * Prabhu Ramachandran (Bombay, India) -- Python in Science and Engineering Education in India * William Stein (University of Washington) -- Sage: creating a viable open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica, and Matlab |
Sage Days 22: Computing with Elliptic Curves
The official MSRI page for this workshop.
Location: MSRI at Berkeley, California Dates: June 21, 2010 to July 02, 2010
Schedule
Mailing Lists
Senior People
Number Theory: John Cremona (Warwick), Tim Dokchitser (Cambridge), Noam Elkies (Harvard), Matt Greenberg (Calgary), Ken Ribet (Berkeley), William Stein (University of Washington), Jared Weinstein (UCLA), Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham)
TA: Robert Miller (University of Washington)
Open Source: Robert Bradshaw (Google), Fernando Perez (Berkeley), Peter Norvig (Director of Research at Google), Prabhu Ramachandran (Bombay)
Project Groups
Projects:
John Cremona (Warwick University): ''Tables of elliptic curves''
Matthew Greenberg (University of Calgary): ''Mod p representations associated to elliptic curves''
Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham): ''p-adic L-series and Iwasawa theory''
Colloquium
- Ken Ribet (Berkeley): TBA
Special Day -- June 25: Open Research Computation in Python
- Robert Bradshaw (Google) -- Cython: the best of both worlds
- Jarrod Millman (Berkeley) -- The Foundation for Mathematical and Scientific Computing
- Peter Norvig (Google) -- TBA
- Fernando Perez (Berkeley) -- Python: an ecosystem for scientific computing
- Prabhu Ramachandran (Bombay, India) -- Python in Science and Engineering Education in India
- William Stein (University of Washington) -- Sage: creating a viable open source alternative to Magma, Maple, Mathematica, and Matlab
Links
There will be another workshop at MSRI at the same time on elliptic curves for undergrads: http://www.msri.org/up/2010