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Analysis on Singular Spaces
Aug 18, 2008
to Dec 19, 2008
Gilles Carron (University of Nantes), Eugenie Hunsicker (Loughborough University), Richard Melrose (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Michael Taylor (Andras VasyUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill), and Jared Wunsch (Northwestern University)
Tags:
Scientific
A central problem in modern mathematics is that of extending analytic constructions which are well understood in the setting of smooth compact manifolds to a broader class of spaces which are allowed to be singular. Such objects arise naturally in many geometric contexts: Singular varieties in algebraic geometry not only occur naturally as fundamental objects themselves, but even the moduli spaces of smooth varieties are naturally singular. Seemingly smooth, noncompact objects often become singular spaces upon compactification: Euclidean space can be radially compactified to a manifold with boundary, the simplest possible “singular space,” while the configuration space for k-particle dynamics on Rn naturally has a compactification as an n-dimensional manifold with corners. Smooth symmetric spaces often have natural compactifications, such as the Borel-Serre compactification, that are manifolds with corners. And objects with irregular boundaries occur frequently in mathematical physics: classical problems like the scattering of waves by a slit already involve singular geometries. Singular structures are moreover thought to play an important role in the scattering of seismic waves through the interior of the earth; the associated inverse problem is of manifest practical importance. ![]() Workshop(s):
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