My aim in these lectures is to examine the multifaceted and mutually
perpetuating connections between dynamical systems, combinatorics, and number
theory. In particular, we will discuss Furstenberg's ergodic approach to
Szemerédi's theorem on arithmetic progressions and its far reaching
recent ramifications (including polynomial extensions of Szemerédi's
theorem and the Green-Tao theorem on arithmetic progressions within the
primes), applications of ultrafilters in modern research, and the role of
flows on nilmanifolds in ergodic Ramsey theory.
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Date
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Time
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Room
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Title
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Monday, March 12, 2012
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4:00-5:00 pm
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BESC 180
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The Multifarious Poincaré Recurrence Theorem
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Wednesday, March 14, 2012
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4:00-5:00 pm
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BESC 185
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Ultrafilters and Ergodic Ramsey Theory
Following Wednesday's lecture there will be a reception in honor of
Professor Bergelson at the Koenig Alumni Center, 1202 University
Avenue (the SE corner of Broadway and University).
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Friday, March 16, 2012
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4:00-5:00 pm
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BESC 180
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Generalized Polynomials, Uniform Distribution, and Dynamics on Nilmanifolds
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Vitaly Bergelson
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Vitaly Bergelson received his Ph.D. from the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem under the guidance of Professor H. Furstenberg in 1984, and was
awarded the Landau Prize for his doctoral dissertation, which dealt with
applications of ergodic theory to combinatorics. After graduation he
accepted a postdoctoral position at Ohio State University and has been
with OSU ever since. He is engaged in extensive research and advising work
which is mainly devoted to the interplay between dynamics, combinatorics,
and number theory. Professor Bergelson is actively devoted to the
dissemination of mathematical knowledge; he has given hundreds of lectures
all over the world, including an invited address at the International Congress
of Mathematicians in 2006 in Madrid, two plenary talks at American Mathematical
Society meetings, a Mordell lecture at Cambridge, mini-courses in Italy, India,
Mexico, Chile, the Czech Republic, South Korea, New Zealand, and series of
lectures at the CBMS Conference on Ergodic Ramsey Theory at Eastern Illinois
University and at the School on Dynamical Systems in Trieste.
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DeLong Lecture Series
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This Lecture Series is funded by an endowment given by Professor Ira M.
DeLong, who came to the University of Colorado in 1888 at the age of 33.
Professor DeLong essentially became the mathematics department by teaching
not only the college subjects but also the preparatory mathematics courses.
Professor DeLong was a prominent citizen of the community of Boulder as
well as president of the Mercantile Bank and Trust Company, organizer of the
Colorado Education Association, and president of the charter convention that
gave Boulder the city manager form of government in 1917. After his death
in 1942, it was decided that the bequest he made to the mathematics
department would accumulate interest until income became available to fund
DeLong prizes for undergraduates and DeLong Lectureships to bring outstanding
mathematicians to campus each year.
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