09:30 to 10:20 |
Didier Lesesvre (University of Lille, Lille, France) |
Relation between low-lying zeros and central values In practice, L-functions appear as generating functions encapsulating information about various objects, such as Galois representations, elliptic curves, arithmetic functions, modular forms, Maass forms, etc. Studying L-functions is therefore of utmost importance in number theory at large. Two of their attached data carry critical information: their zeros, which govern the distributional behavior of underlying objects; and their central values, which are related to invariants such as the class number of a field extension. We discuss a connection between low-lying zeros and central values of L-functions, in particular showing that results about the distribution of low-lying zeros (towards the density conjecture of Katz-Sarnak) implies results about the distribution of the central values (towards the normal distribution conjecture of Keating-Snaith). Even though we discuss this principle in general, we instanciate it in the case of modular forms in the level aspect to give a statement and explain the arguments of the proof.
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10:30 to 11:20 |
Vinay Kumaraswamy (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden) |
Lower bounds for cubic hypersurfaces n this talk, I will discuss the problem of obtaining lower bounds for the number of rational points of bounded height on cubic hypersufaces. Our main tools will be the circle method, the Ekedahl sieve and the geometry of numbers.
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11:40 to 12:30 |
Pankaj Vishe (Durham University, Durham, UK) |
A two dimensional delta method and applications to quadratic forms We develop a two dimensional version of the delta symbol method and apply it to establish quantitative Hasse principle for a smooth pair of quadrics defined over Q defined over at least 10 variables. This is a joint work with Simon L. Rydin Myerson (warwick) and Junxian Li (UC Davis).
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15:00 to 15:50 |
Roman Holowinsky (Ohio State University, Columbus, USA) |
Similarity relations between delta methods We will present some similarity relations between various delta methods depending on the rank and arithmetic of the object to which they are applied. These will be given in the context of subconvexity results for Rankin-Selberg convolutions.
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16:00 to 16:50 |
Djordje Milicevic (Bryn Mawr College, USA) |
Distribution of exponential sum paths Consider a classical ensemble of complete exponential sums exhibiting square-root cancellation, such as a natural family of Kloosterman sums, Gauss sums, or character sums. Polygonal paths traced by their normalized incomplete sums give a fascinating insight into their chaotic formation. In this talk, we will present our joint results describing convergence in law in two families of Kloosterman and Gauss paths, in which we find that each family in fact splits into multiple distinct ensembles, each converging in law to an explicit random complex-valued Fourier series. The key arithmetic inputs are estimates on sums of products, which are also of broader interest in families of L-functions. There will be many pretty pictures!
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