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Random Matrix Theory and its Applications II
Dec 6, 2010 to Dec 10, 2010

Organizer(s)

Alexei Borodin* (California Institute of Technology), Percy Deift (Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences), Alice Guionnet (Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon), Pierre van Moerbeke (Universite Catholique de Louvain and Brandeis University), and Craig A.Tracy (University of California, Davis)
To apply for funding, you must register by Sun, Sep 19 2010.

Random matrix theory (RMT) was introduced into the theoretical physics community by Eugene Wignerinthe 1950s as a model for the scattering resonances of neutrons off large nuclei. In multivariate statistics, random matrix models were introduced in the late 1920s by John Wishart and subsequently developed by Anderson, James and others. Since these early beginnings RMT has found an extraordinary variety of mathematical, physical and engineering applications that, to name some, include number theory, stochastic growth models, tiling problems and wireless communications.
In the spring of 1999, MSRI hosted a very successful and influential one-semester program on RMT and its applications. At the workshops during the semester, there was a sense of excitement as brand new and very recent results were reported. The goal of the 2010 Program is to showcase the many remarkable developments that have taken place since 1999 and to spur further developments in RMT and related areas of interacting particle systems (IPS) and integrable systems (IS) as well as to highlight various applications of RMT.

Invited Speakers

Mark Adler (Brandeis University), Ioana Dumitriu (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT), Alan Edelman (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT), Partik Ferrari (University of Bonn), Nikolai Makarov (California Institute of Technology), Neil O'Connell (University of Warwick), Andrei Okounkov (Princeton University), Jeremy Quastel (University of Toronto), Nikolai Reshetikhin (University of California, Berkeley), Tomohiro Sasamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology), Timo Seppäläinen (University of Wisconsin), Herbert Spohn (Technical University of Munich), Kazumasa Takeuchi (University of Tokyo), Benedek Valko (University of Wisconsin), Balint Virag (University of Toronto), Harold Widom (University of California, Santa Cruz), Paul Wiegmann (University of Chicago), Lauren Williams (University of California, Berkeley)

Bibliography (PDF)





Accommodations:

A block of rooms has been reserved at the Rose Garden Inn. Reservations may be made by calling 1-800-992-9005 OR directly on their website. Click on Corporate at the bottom of the screen and when prompted enter code MATH (this code is not case sensitive). By using this code a new calendar will appear and will show MSRI rate on all room types available.
The cut-off date for reservations is November 19, 2010.

A block of rooms has been reserved at the Hotel Durant. Please mention the workshop name and reference the following code when making reservations via phone, fax or e-mail: MSRIRANDOMMATRIX. If you are making your reservations on line, please go to Hotel Durant website, choose your dates of stay and enter the "123MSRI" promo code in the box.

New, completely renovated Hotel Shattuck Plaza has rooms available for you!
MSRI’s preferred rate is $131. Guests can either call the hotel’s main line, 510-845-7300, and ask for the MSRI rate or go to http://www.hotelshattuckplaza.com, click on "Corporate Rates" in the reservation screen and type the code msri10.

Funding

To apply for funding, you must register by Sun, Sep 19 2010. Click to Register
Students, recent Ph.D.'s, women, and members of underrepresented minorities are particularly encouraged to apply. Funding awards are made typically 6 weeks before the workshop begins. Requests received after the funding deadline are considered only if additional funds become available.
Schedule
Monday, December 06, 2010
8:30AM - 8:45AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Welcome
8:45AM - 9:45AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Mark Adler The Dyson Brownian Minor Process and Consecutive Minors ( Abstract ) [Video available]
9:45AM - 10:15AM MSRI Tea
10:15AM - 11:15AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Harold Widom A Useful Integral Representation in ASEP ( Abstract ) [Video available]
11:30AM - 12:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Herbert Spohn The KPZ Equation: Lattice Discretizations and Replica ( Abstract ) [Video available]
12:30PM - 2:00PM MSRI Lunch
2:00PM - 3:00PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Tomohiro Sasamoto Height Distributions in One-Dimensional Surface Growth: from ASEP to KPZ Equation ( Abstract ) [Video available]
3:00PM - 3:30PM MSRI Tea
4:10PM - 5:00PM UC Berkeley Alice Guionnet Asymptotics of Random Matrices ( Abstract )
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
9:00AM - 10:00AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Patrik Ferrari TASEP and Gaussian Ensembles: Analogies and Differences ( Abstract ) [Video available]
10:00AM - 10:30AM MSRI Tea
10:30AM - 11:30AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Jeremy Quastel The Continuum Random Polymer and KPZ ( Abstract ) [Video available]
11:30AM - 12:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Kazumasa Takeuchi Tracy-Widom Distributions in Experiment: Evidence in Growing Interfaces of Liquid Crystal Turbulence ( Abstract ) [Video available]
12:30PM - 2:30PM MSRI Lunch [Video available]
2:30PM - 3:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Timo Seppalainen Scaling Exponents for Certain 1+1-Dimensional Directed Polymers ( Abstract ) [Video available]
3:30PM - 4:00PM MSRI Tea
4:00PM - 5:00PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Lauren Williams A Combinatorial Approach to the Asymmetric Exclusion Process ( Abstract ) [Video available]
5:00PM - 6:30PM MSRI Reception
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
9:00AM - 10:00AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Doron Lubinsky Universality Limits for Random Matrices via Classical Complex Analysis ( Abstract ) [Video available]
10:00AM - 10:30AM MSRI Tea
10:30AM - 11:30AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Paul Wiegmann Emergent Conformal Symmetry in Dyson-Selberg Integrals [Video available]
11:30AM - 12:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Nikolai Makarov TBA [Video available]
Thursday, December 09, 2010
9:00AM - 10:00AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Balint Virag Finite-Rank Pertutbations of Real Random Matrices [Video available]
10:00AM - 10:30AM MSRI Tea
10:30AM - 11:30AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Andrei Okounkov Noncommutative Geometry and Painlevé [Video available]
11:30AM - 12:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Nicolai Reshetikhin On Height Functions [Video available]
12:30PM - 2:30PM MSRI Lunch
2:30PM - 3:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Knut Solna Target Detection and Localization in the Presence of Noise ( Abstract ) [Video available]
3:30PM - 4:00PM MSRI Tea
4:00PM - 5:00PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Neil O\'Connell Directed Polymers and the Quantum Toda Lattice ( Abstract ) [Video available]
Friday, December 10, 2010
9:00AM - 10:00AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Alan Edelman What are the Eigenvalues of a Sum of Non-Commuting Random Symmetric Matrices? : A "Quantum Information" inspired Answer. [Video available]
10:00AM - 10:30AM MSRI Tea
10:30AM - 11:30AM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Ioana Dumitriu Global Fluctuations for \(\beta\)-Jacobi Ensembles ( Abstract ) [Video available]
11:30AM - 12:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Nicholas Witte \(\lambda\) Expansions of Fredholm Determinants and the Borodin-Okounkov Identity ( Abstract ) [Video available]
12:30PM - 2:00PM MSRI Lunch
2:00PM - 3:00PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Benedek Valko Scaling Limits of Beta Ensembles ( Abstract ) [Video available]
3:00PM - 3:30PM MSRI Tea
3:30PM - 4:30PM MSRI, Simons Auditorium Noureddine El Karoui Some Remarks on Random Matrix Theory and Statistics ( Abstract ) [Video available]


Questions about this workshop should be sent either by email to
or by regular mail to:
Random Matrix Theory and its Applications II
Mathematical Sciences Research Institute
17 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA
94720-5070.
USA

The Institute is committed to the principles of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action.



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