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University of Nebraska–Lincoln

Howard Rowlee Lecture Series

The Rowlee Lecture for 2008 will be given by Peter Sarnak of the Institute for Advanced Study will deliver the Howard Rowlee Lecture at 4:00pm on Friday, May 2 2008 in 115 Avery Hall.

To be preceded by a reception in 348 Avery Hall from 3:15-3:50pm.

Publicity poster

Equidistribution and Primes

Abstract

We review briefly various classical problems concerning the existence of primes or numbers with few prime factors as well as some of the developments towards resolving these long standing questions. We then put these problems in a natural and geometric context of actions by morphisms on affine n-space and outline a theory that has been developed in this context and some applications to classical problems connected with Pythagorean triangles and Apollonian packings.The methods used to develop a combinatorial sieve in this setting involve automorphic forms, expander graphs and unexpectedly, arithmetic combinatorics.

About the Speaker

Peter Sarnak has made major contributions to to number theory, and to questions in analysis motivated by number theory. His interest in mathematics is wide-ranging, and his research focuses on the theory of zeta functions and automorphic forms with applications to number theory, combinatorics, and mathematical physics.

In the course of his career, he has served on the faculty of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University, Stanford University and Princeton University. He is currently the Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton, as well as Professor of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Professor Sarnak is the recipient of numerous honors. Among these are American Mathematical Society's Levi L. Conant and Frank Nelson Cole Prizes (2003 and 2005 respectively), the Polya Prize of the Society Industrial and Applied Mathematicians (1998) and a Sloan Fellowship (1983). In 2002, he was named a Member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of The Royal Society of London.

For more information, contact: Steve Cohn

Rowle Lecture Series

The Howard Rowlee Lecture series is made possible through a generous donation by Mr. Howard E. Rowlee, Jr., a Lincoln resident and friend of the Department, who has established a fund at the University of Nebraska Foundation to support research in mathematics. The Howard Rowlee Lecture is an annual event which seeks to bring internationally acclaimed scholars in the mathematical sciences to UNL to promote public understanding of mathematical research and to stimulate the environment for mathematics research at UNL. The inaugural Howard Rowlee Lecture was given in 1997 by Efim Zelmanov, Professor of Mathematics at Yale University and the winner of the Fields Medal in 1994 for his seminal contributions to algebra.

Complete Listing of Howard Rowlee Lecturers

Year Speaker Institution
2008 Peter Sarnak Institute for Advanced Study
2007 Béla Bollobás Trinity College, Cambridge, and the University of Memphis
2006 Ingrid Daubechies Princeton University
2005 James P. Keener University of Utah
2004 Donald Saari University of California, Irvine
2003 Mark J. Ablowitz University of Colorado, Boulder
2002 Ron Graham University of California, San Diego
2001 Vaughan F. R. Jones University of California, Berkeley
2000 Melvin Hochster University of Michigan
1999 Bradley Efron Stanford University
1998 Avner Friedman University of Minnesota
1997 Efim Zelmanov Yale University

Previous lectures in this series have also been supported by the Department of Mathematics, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the University of Nebraska–Lincoln Research Council.