When visiting graduate student Gianmarco Caldini first arrived at IAS in spring 2024, a series of fortuitous connections on the Institute campus and beyond led him and Camillo De Lellis, IBM von Neumann Professor in the School of Mathematics, to both a collaboration and a friendship with renowned topologist and frequent IAS Member Bill Browder. Their work resulted in the publication of a decades-old theorem originally begun by Browder and Frederick J. Almgren Jr.
In 2020–21, Allen Yuan,
Visitor in the School of Mathematics and a recent graduate from
MIT, is studying problems in homotopy theory and algebraic
topology.
How do you describe your work to friends and family?
In 2017–18, I led a special program about analysis and
topology on locally symmetric spaces as a Distinguished
Visiting Professor in the School of Mathematics. Locally symmetric
spaces are the home of the Langlands program—a set of overarching
and...
During the 2015-16 academic year, the School of Mathematics
hosted a program on the topic of geometric structures in three
dimensions. This article is an adaptation of a talk I gave in fall
2015, as part of the School's biweekly "Mathematical...
Symplectic and contact structures first arose in the study of classical mechanical systems, allowing one to describe the time evolution of both simple and complex systems such as springs, planetary motion, and wave propagation. Understanding the evolution and distinguishing transformations of these systems led to the development of global invariants of symplectic and contact manifolds.
Topology is the branch of geometry that deals with large-scale
features of shapes. One cliché is that a topologist cannot
distinguish a doughnut from a coffee cup: if a coffee cup were made
of rubber, one could continuously deform it to a doughnut...
Topology is the only major branch of modern mathematics that
wasn't anticipated by the ancient mathematicians. Throughout most
of its history, topology has been regarded as strictly abstract
mathematics, without applications. However, illustrating...
Mathematics has proven to be "unreasonably effective" in
understanding nature. The fundamental laws of physics can be
captured in beautiful formulae. In this lecture, given at the
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Robbert Dijkgraaf...
The story of the “data explosion” is by now a familiar one:
throughout science, engineering, commerce, and government, we are
collecting and storing data at an ever-increasing rate. We can
hardly read the news or turn on a computer without...