Ober­se­mi­nar "Num­ber Theo­ry and Arith­me­ti­cal Sta­ti­stics"

  Ort: A3.339                                Uhrzeit: 14:15 - 15:45 Uhr

Das Seminar findet ab dem 09.04.2024 regelmäßig dienstags statt.

  • Dienstag, 16.04.2024 Jan Diekmann "Fermat's Last Theorem for regular primes"
  • Dienstag, 23.04.2024 Michael Baake, "Dynamical and spectral properties of some shift spaces of number-theoretic origin" (11:15 - 12:45 Uhr, Medienraum D2.314)
  • Dienstag, 23.04.2024 Fabian Gundlach, Symmetries of the set of squarefree integers in a number field 
  • Dienstag, 21.05.2024 Marc Technau, The distribution of quadratic non-residues: A stroll through the garden
  • Dienstag, 28.05.2024 Béranger Seguin, Algebraic Patching for Beginners
  • Dienstag, 11.06.2024 Daniel Windisch, Algebraic geometry of equilibria in cooperative games

Ober­se­mi­nar "Num­ber Theo­ry and Arith­me­ti­cal Sta­ti­stics": Mi­cha­el Baa­ke (Bie­le­feld), Dy­na­mi­cal and spec­tral pro­per­ties of some shift spaces of num­ber-the­o­re­tic ori­gin

Ort: D2.314 Medienraum
Veranstalter: Prof. Dr. Jürgen Klüners

Titel: Dynamical and spectral properties of some shift spaces of number-theoretic origin

Abstract: While B-free systems in one dimension have been studied for a long time, considerably less is known on their higher-dimensional analogues. Starting from the visible points of the integer lattice, a large class of such systems emerge via k-free integers in algebraic number fields. We discuss typical examples with some focus on their spectral properties and on topological invariants such as entropy and (extended) symmetries.

Ober­se­mi­nar "Num­ber Theo­ry and Arith­me­ti­cal Sta­ti­stics": Mi­cha­el Baa­ke (Bie­le­feld), Dy­na­mi­cal and spec­tral pro­per­ties of some shift spaces of num­ber-the­o­re­tic ori­gin

Ort: D2.314 Medienraum
Veranstalter: Prof. Dr. Jürgen Klüners

Titel: Dynamical and spectral properties of some shift spaces of number-theoretic origin

Abstract: While B-free systems in one dimension have been studied for a long time, considerably less is known on their higher-dimensional analogues. Starting from the visible points of the integer lattice, a large class of such systems emerge via k-free integers in algebraic number fields. We discuss typical examples with some focus on their spectral properties and on topological invariants such as entropy and (extended) symmetries.