Terry Tao is coming to Australia for a lecture tour.
He'll be giving a public lecture "Structure and randomness in the prime numbers" at UNSW in Leighton Hall, Scientia Building on Sept. 16, 6pm.
Details:
1-day meetings & lectures : Clay–Mahler lectures, University of NSW : Wed, September 16, 2009, 3:00 pm - 8:45 pm : Aust MS
Abstract:
God may not play dice with the universe, but something strange is going on with the prime numbers — Paul Erdős.
The prime numbers are a fascinating blend of both structure (for instance, almost all primes are odd) and randomness. It is widely believed that beyond the obvious structures in the primes, the primes otherwise behave as if they were distributed randomly; this pseudorandomness then underlies our belief in many unsolved conjectures about the primes, from the twin prime conjecture to the Riemann hypothesis. This pseudorandomness has been frustratingly elusive to actually prove rigorously, but recently there has been progress in capturing enough of this pseudorandomness to establish new results about the primes, such as the fact that they contain arbitrarily long progressions. We survey some of these developments in this talk.
Notes: http://terrytao.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/structure-and-randomness-in-the-prime-numbers.pdf
More on the tour:
UNSW's flyer: http://www.maths.unsw.edu.au/news/2009/TerryTao.pdf
Clay–Mahler lecture tour for 2009 : Aust MS
He'll be giving a public lecture "Structure and randomness in the prime numbers" at UNSW in Leighton Hall, Scientia Building on Sept. 16, 6pm.
Details:
1-day meetings & lectures : Clay–Mahler lectures, University of NSW : Wed, September 16, 2009, 3:00 pm - 8:45 pm : Aust MS
Abstract:
God may not play dice with the universe, but something strange is going on with the prime numbers — Paul Erdős.
The prime numbers are a fascinating blend of both structure (for instance, almost all primes are odd) and randomness. It is widely believed that beyond the obvious structures in the primes, the primes otherwise behave as if they were distributed randomly; this pseudorandomness then underlies our belief in many unsolved conjectures about the primes, from the twin prime conjecture to the Riemann hypothesis. This pseudorandomness has been frustratingly elusive to actually prove rigorously, but recently there has been progress in capturing enough of this pseudorandomness to establish new results about the primes, such as the fact that they contain arbitrarily long progressions. We survey some of these developments in this talk.
Notes: http://terrytao.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/structure-and-randomness-in-the-prime-numbers.pdf
More on the tour:
UNSW's flyer: http://www.maths.unsw.edu.au/news/2009/TerryTao.pdf
Clay–Mahler lecture tour for 2009 : Aust MS
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