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Several important aspects of moduli spaces and irreducible
holomorphic symplectic manifolds were highlighted at the conference
"Algebraic and Complex Geometry" held September 2012 in Hannover,
Germany. These two subjects of recent ongoing progress belong to
the most spectacular developments in Algebraic and Complex
Geometry. Irreducible symplectic manifolds are of interest to
algebraic and differential geometers alike, behaving similar to K3
surfaces and abelian varieties in certain ways, but being by far
less well-understood. Moduli spaces, on the other hand, have been a
rich source of open questions and discoveries for decades and still
continue to be a hot topic in itself as well as with its interplay
with neighbouring fields such as arithmetic geometry and string
theory. Beyond the above focal topics this volume reflects the
broad diversity of lectures at the conference and comprises 11
papers on current research from different areas of algebraic and
complex geometry sorted in alphabetic order by the first author. It
also includes a full list of speakers with all titles and
abstracts.
In recent years, research in K3 surfaces and Calabi-Yau varieties
has seen spectacular progress from both arithmetic and geometric
points of view, which in turn continues to have a huge influence
and impact in theoretical physics-in particular, in string theory.
The workshop on Arithmetic and Geometry of K3 surfaces and
Calabi-Yau threefolds, held at the Fields Institute (August 16-25,
2011), aimed to give a state-of-the-art survey of these new
developments. This proceedings volume includes a representative
sampling of the broad range of topics covered by the workshop.
While the subjects range from arithmetic geometry through algebraic
geometry and differential geometry to mathematical physics, the
papers are naturally related by the common theme of Calabi-Yau
varieties. With the big variety of branches of mathematics and
mathematical physics touched upon, this area reveals many deep
connections between subjects previously considered unrelated.
Unlike most other conferences, the 2011 Calabi-Yau workshop started
with 3 days of introductory lectures. A selection of 4 of these
lectures is included in this volume. These lectures can be used as
a starting point for the graduate students and other junior
researchers, or as a guide to the subject.
This book lays out the theory of Mordell-Weil lattices, a very
powerful and influential tool at the crossroads of algebraic
geometry and number theory, which offers many fruitful connections
to other areas of mathematics. The book presents all the
ingredients entering into the theory of Mordell-Weil lattices in
detail, notably, relevant portions of lattice theory, elliptic
curves, and algebraic surfaces. After defining Mordell-Weil
lattices, the authors provide several applications in depth. They
start with the classification of rational elliptic surfaces. Then a
useful connection with Galois representations is discussed. By
developing the notion of excellent families, the authors are able
to design many Galois representations with given Galois groups such
as the Weyl groups of E6, E7 and E8. They also explain a connection
to the classical topic of the 27 lines on a cubic surface.Two
chapters deal with elliptic K3 surfaces, a pulsating area of recent
research activity which highlights many central properties of
Mordell-Weil lattices. Finally, the book turns to the rank
problem-one of the key motivations for the introduction of
Mordell-Weil lattices. The authors present the state of the art of
the rank problem for elliptic curves both over Q and over C(t) and
work out applications to the sphere packing problem. Throughout,
the book includes many instructive examples illustrating the
theory.
In recent years, research in K3 surfaces and Calabi-Yau varieties
has seen spectacular progress from both arithmetic and geometric
points of view, which in turn continues to have a huge influence
and impact in theoretical physics-in particular, in string theory.
The workshop on Arithmetic and Geometry of K3 surfaces and
Calabi-Yau threefolds, held at the Fields Institute (August 16-25,
2011), aimed to give a state-of-the-art survey of these new
developments. This proceedings volume includes a representative
sampling of the broad range of topics covered by the workshop.
While the subjects range from arithmetic geometry through algebraic
geometry and differential geometry to mathematical physics, the
papers are naturally related by the common theme of Calabi-Yau
varieties. With the big variety of branches of mathematics and
mathematical physics touched upon, this area reveals many deep
connections between subjects previously considered unrelated.
Unlike most other conferences, the 2011 Calabi-Yau workshop started
with 3 days of introductory lectures. A selection of 4 of these
lectures is included in this volume. These lectures can be used as
a starting point for the graduate students and other junior
researchers, or as a guide to the subject.
This book lays out the theory of Mordell-Weil lattices, a very
powerful and influential tool at the crossroads of algebraic
geometry and number theory, which offers many fruitful connections
to other areas of mathematics. The book presents all the
ingredients entering into the theory of Mordell-Weil lattices in
detail, notably, relevant portions of lattice theory, elliptic
curves, and algebraic surfaces. After defining Mordell-Weil
lattices, the authors provide several applications in depth. They
start with the classification of rational elliptic surfaces. Then a
useful connection with Galois representations is discussed. By
developing the notion of excellent families, the authors are able
to design many Galois representations with given Galois groups such
as the Weyl groups of E6, E7 and E8. They also explain a connection
to the classical topic of the 27 lines on a cubic surface.Two
chapters deal with elliptic K3 surfaces, a pulsating area of recent
research activity which highlights many central properties of
Mordell-Weil lattices. Finally, the book turns to the rank
problem-one of the key motivations for the introduction of
Mordell-Weil lattices. The authors present the state of the art of
the rank problem for elliptic curves both over Q and over C(t) and
work out applications to the sphere packing problem. Throughout,
the book includes many instructive examples illustrating the
theory.
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