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== Speakers == | == 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) |
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* [[/cremona|John Cremona (Warwick University): ''Tables of elliptic curves'']] * [[/dokchitser|Tim Dokchitser (Cambridge University): ''Complex L-functions and the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture'']] * [[/greenberg|Matthew Greenberg (University of Calgary): ''Elliptic curves over number fields'']] * [[/weinstein|Jared Weinstein (UCLA) and William Stein (Univ. of Washington): ''Heegner Points and Kolyvagin's Euler system'']] * [[/wuthrich|Christian Wuthrich (Nottingham): ''p-adic L-series and Iwasawa theory'']] |
* [[/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 * William Stein (University of Washington): Sage |
=== Special Day -- June 25: Open Research Computation in Python === |
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== Project Groups == | * 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 |
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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]] |
== T-Shirts == |
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Information about conference T-shirts can be found [[/shirts|here]]. |
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
T-Shirts
Information about conference T-shirts can be found here.
Links
There will be another workshop at MSRI at the same time on elliptic curves for undergrads: http://www.msri.org/up/2010