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The juxtaposition of 'machine learning' and 'pure mathematics and
theoretical physics' may first appear as contradictory in terms.
The rigours of proofs and derivations in the latter seem to reside
in a different world from the randomness of data and statistics in
the former. Yet, an often under-appreciated component of
mathematical discovery, typically not presented in a final draft,
is experimentation: both with ideas and with mathematical data.
Think of the teenage Gauss, who conjectured the Prime Number
Theorem by plotting the prime-counting function, many decades
before complex analysis was formalized to offer a proof.Can modern
technology in part mimic Gauss's intuition? The past five years saw
an explosion of activity in using AI to assist the human mind in
uncovering new mathematics: finding patterns, accelerating
computations, and raising conjectures via the machine learning of
pure, noiseless data. The aim of this book, a first of its kind, is
to collect research and survey articles from experts in this
emerging dialogue between theoretical mathematics and machine
learning. It does not dwell on the well-known multitude of
mathematical techniques in deep learning, but focuses on the
reverse relationship: how machine learning helps with mathematics.
Taking a panoramic approach, the topics range from combinatorics to
number theory, and from geometry to quantum field theory and string
theory. Aimed at PhD students as well as seasoned researchers, each
self-contained chapter offers a glimpse of an exciting future of
this symbiosis.
Can artificial intelligence learn mathematics? The question is at
the heart of this original monograph bringing together theoretical
physics, modern geometry, and data science. The study of Calabi-Yau
manifolds lies at an exciting intersection between physics and
mathematics. Recently, there has been much activity in applying
machine learning to solve otherwise intractable problems, to
conjecture new formulae, or to understand the underlying structure
of mathematics. In this book, insights from string and quantum
field theory are combined with powerful techniques from complex and
algebraic geometry, then translated into algorithms with the
ultimate aim of deriving new information about Calabi-Yau
manifolds. While the motivation comes from mathematical physics,
the techniques are purely mathematical and the theme is that of
explicit calculations. The reader is guided through the theory and
provided with explicit computer code in standard software such as
SageMath, Python and Mathematica to gain hands-on experience in
applications of artificial intelligence to geometry. Driven by data
and written in an informal style, The Calabi-Yau Landscape makes
cutting-edge topics in mathematical physics, geometry and machine
learning readily accessible to graduate students and beyond. The
overriding ambition is to introduce some modern mathematics to the
physicist, some modern physics to the mathematician, and machine
learning to both.
'The book is an engaging and influential collection of significant
contributions from an assembly of world expert leaders and pioneers
from different fields, working at the interface between topology
and physics or applications of topology to physical systems ... The
book explores many interesting and novel topics that lie at the
intersection between gravity, quantum fields, condensed matter,
physical cosmology and topology ... A rich, well-organized, and
comprehensive overview of remarkable and insightful connections
between physics and topology is here made available to the physics
reader.'Contemporary PhysicsSince its birth in Poincare's seminal
1894 'Analysis Situs', topology has become a cornerstone of
mathematics. As with all beautiful mathematical concepts, topology
inevitably - resonating with that Wignerian principle of the
effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences - finds its
prominent role in physics. From Chern-Simons theory to topological
quantum field theory, from knot invariants to Calabi-Yau
compactification in string theory, from spacetime topology in
cosmology to the recent Nobel Prize winning work on topological
insulators, the interactions between topology and physics have been
a triumph over the past few decades.In this eponymous volume, we
are honoured to have contributions from an assembly of grand
masters of the field, guiding us with their world-renowned
expertise on the subject of the interplay between 'Topology' and
'Physics'. Beginning with a preface by Chen Ning Yang on his
recollections of the early days, we proceed to a novel view of
nuclei from the perspective of complex geometry by Sir Michael
Atiyah and Nick Manton, followed by an entree toward recent
developments in two-dimensional gravity and intersection theory on
the moduli space of Riemann surfaces by Robbert Dijkgraaf and
Edward Witten; a study of Majorana fermions and relations to the
Braid group by Louis H Kauffman; a pioneering investigation on
arithmetic gauge theory by Minhyong Kim; an anecdote-enriched
review of singularity theorems in black-hole physics by Sir Roger
Penrose; an adventure beyond anyons by Zhenghan Wang; an apercu on
topological insulators from first-principle calculations by Haijun
Zhang and Shou-Cheng Zhang; finishing with synopsis on quantum
information theory as one of the four revolutions in physics and
the second quantum revolution by Xiao-Gang Wen. We hope that this
book will serve to inspire the research community.
'The book is an engaging and influential collection of significant
contributions from an assembly of world expert leaders and pioneers
from different fields, working at the interface between topology
and physics or applications of topology to physical systems ... The
book explores many interesting and novel topics that lie at the
intersection between gravity, quantum fields, condensed matter,
physical cosmology and topology ... A rich, well-organized, and
comprehensive overview of remarkable and insightful connections
between physics and topology is here made available to the physics
reader.'Contemporary PhysicsSince its birth in Poincare's seminal
1894 'Analysis Situs', topology has become a cornerstone of
mathematics. As with all beautiful mathematical concepts, topology
inevitably - resonating with that Wignerian principle of the
effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences - finds its
prominent role in physics. From Chern-Simons theory to topological
quantum field theory, from knot invariants to Calabi-Yau
compactification in string theory, from spacetime topology in
cosmology to the recent Nobel Prize winning work on topological
insulators, the interactions between topology and physics have been
a triumph over the past few decades.In this eponymous volume, we
are honoured to have contributions from an assembly of grand
masters of the field, guiding us with their world-renowned
expertise on the subject of the interplay between 'Topology' and
'Physics'. Beginning with a preface by Chen Ning Yang on his
recollections of the early days, we proceed to a novel view of
nuclei from the perspective of complex geometry by Sir Michael
Atiyah and Nick Manton, followed by an entree toward recent
developments in two-dimensional gravity and intersection theory on
the moduli space of Riemann surfaces by Robbert Dijkgraaf and
Edward Witten; a study of Majorana fermions and relations to the
Braid group by Louis H Kauffman; a pioneering investigation on
arithmetic gauge theory by Minhyong Kim; an anecdote-enriched
review of singularity theorems in black-hole physics by Sir Roger
Penrose; an adventure beyond anyons by Zhenghan Wang; an apercu on
topological insulators from first-principle calculations by Haijun
Zhang and Shou-Cheng Zhang; finishing with synopsis on quantum
information theory as one of the four revolutions in physics and
the second quantum revolution by Xiao-Gang Wen. We hope that this
book will serve to inspire the research community.
This volume celebrates the 100th birthday of Professor Chen-Ning
Frank Yang (Nobel 1957), one of the giants of modern science and a
living legend. Starting with reminiscences of Yang's time at the
research centre for theoretical physics at Stonybrook (now named C.
N. Yang Institute) by his successor Peter van Nieuwenhuizen, the
book is a collection of articles by world-renowned mathematicians
and theoretical physicists. This emphasizes the Dialogue Between
Physics and Mathematics that has been a central theme of Professor
Yang's contributions to contemporary science. Fittingly, the
contributions to this volume range from experimental physics to
pure mathematics, via mathematical physics. On the physics side,
the contributions are from Sir Anthony Leggett (Nobel 2003),
Jian-Wei Pan (Willis E. Lamb Award 2018), Alexander Polyakov
(Breakthrough Prize 2013), Gerard 't Hooft (Nobel 1999), Frank
Wilczek (Nobel 2004), Qikun Xue (Fritz London Prize 2020), and
Zhongxian Zhao (Bernd T. Matthias Prize 2015), covering an array of
topics from superconductivity to the foundations of quantum
mechanics. In mathematical physics there are contributions by Sir
Roger Penrose (Nobel 2022) and Edward Witten (Fields Medal 1990) on
quantum twistors and quantum field theory, respectively. On the
mathematics side, the contributions by Vladimir Drinfeld (Fields
Medal 1990), Louis Kauffman (Wiener Gold Medal 2014), and Yuri
Manin (Cantor Medal 2002) offer novel ideas from knot theory to
arithmetic geometry. Inspired by the original ideas of C. N. Yang,
this unique collection of papers b masters of physics and
mathematics provides, at the highest level, contemporary research
directions for graduate students and experts alike.
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