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Seminario Matematico e Fisico di Milano
Piazza Leonardo da Vinci, 32 - 20133 Milano
Direttore: Paolo Stellari
      
Vice Direttore: Gabriele Grillo
      
Segretario: Daniele Cassani

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Guido De Philippis, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences
(Boundary) Regularity for area minimizing surfaces
Martedì 16 Marzo 2021, ore 17:00
polimi-it.zoom.us/j/88596504355
Abstract
 
Martin Bridson, University of Oxford
Chasing finite shadows of infinite groups through geometry
http://unimib.webex.com/unimib-it/j.php?MTID=m54c7d9c5d6d35e...o riunione
Venerdì 19 Febbraio 2021, ore 15:00
https://unimib.webex.com/unimib-it/j.php?MTID=m54c7d9c5d6d35eac4f0c14fdecf4cf0f
Numero riunione:121 183 7342 Password: M6Fm8ZnPFk3
Abstract
 
Alain Goriely, University of Oxford
Mathematics vs Dementia
http://www.mate.polimi.it/smf/index.php?settore=home&id_link...id_link=25
Lunedì 01 Febbraio 2021, ore 11:45
https://polimi-it.zoom.us/j/83674264668
Abstract
 
Irena Lasiecka, University of Memphis
JMGT [Jordan-Moore Gibson-Thompson] dynamics arising in non- linear acoustics - a view from the boundary
http://www.mate.polimi.it/smf/index.php?settore=home&id_link...id_link=25
Lunedì 01 Febbraio 2021, ore 15:00
https://polimi-it.zoom.us/j/83674264668
Abstract
 
Andrè Neves, University of Chicago
Counting minimal surfaces in negatively curved manifolds
http://www.mate.polimi.it/smf/index.php?settore=home&id_link...id_link=25
Lunedì 01 Febbraio 2021, ore 16:15
https://polimi-it.zoom.us/j/83674264668
Abstract
 
Olivier Debarre, Sorbonne Université - Université de Paris
When can solutions of polynomial equations be algebraically parametrized?
http://www.mate.polimi.it/smf/index.php?settore=home&id_link...id_link=25
Lunedì 01 Febbraio 2021, ore 10:30
https://polimi-it.zoom.us/j/83674264668
Abstract
The description of all the solutions of the equation $x^2+y^2=z^2$ in integral numbers (a.k.a. Pythagorean triples) is a very ancient problem: a Babylonian clay tablet from about 1800BC may contain some solutions, Pythagoras (about 500BC) seems to have known one infinite family of solutions, and so did Plato... This gives a first example of a rational variety: the rational points on the circle with equation $x^2+y^2=1$ can be algebraically parametrized by one rational parameter. More generally, one says that a variety, defined by a system of polynomial equations, is rational if its points (the solutions of the system) can be algebraically parametrized, in a one-to-one fashion, by independent parameters. I will begin with easy standard examples, then explain and apply some (not-so-recent) techniques that can be used to prove that some varieties (such as the set of rational solutions of the equation $x^3+y^3+z^3+t^3=1$) are not rational.