MEGA 2011

Effective Methods in Algebraic Geometry
Stockholm, Sweden, May 30 – June 3, 2011
http://www.math.kth.se/mega2011/
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
MEGA is the acronym for Effective Methods in Algebraic Geometry (and its equivalent in Italian, French, Spanish, German, Russian, etc.), a series of roughly biennial conferences on computational and application aspects of Algebraic Geometry and related topics with very high standards. Previous meetings were held in 1990 (Castiglioncello, Italy), 1992 (Nice, France), 1994 (Santander, Spain), 1996 (Eindhoven, Nederlands), 1998 (St. Malo, France), 2000 (Bath, United Kingdom), 2003 (Kaiserslautern, Germany), 2005 (Porto Conte, Italy), 2007 (Strobl, Austria), and 2009 (Barcelona, Spain). As in previous conferences, we plan to publish selected papers from the conference in a special issue of the Journal of Symbolic Computation.
Proceedings containing a selection of the papers and invited talks presented at previous Mega conferences have been published by Birkhäuser in the series Progress in Mathematics, by the Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra, and the three last editions by the Journal of Symbolic Computation.
MEGA 2011 will be held at the University of Stockholm, Sweden.
Submissions
Submissions should contain recent original research relevant to the topics of the conference, under the form of an Extended Abstract.
The Extended Abstracts should be at least four pages long (plus bibliography) and should contain detailed results, an outline of the proofs and all of the main ideas. Submitted contributions to this conference or related material could be submitted to another conference or journal. Material not submitted simultaneously elsewhere might be given priority.
Acceptance of a submitted contribution means acceptance for oral presentation only. A Call for Papers for the Conference Proceedings will be announced during (and after) the conference.
There will be future calls for Short Communications, Software Demonstrations and Posters.
The submission page will be available at
http://www.math.kth.se/mega2011/ starting on January 3, 2011.
Important Dates
Deadline for Submissions ……………………..: February 8,2011
Deadline for Submissions of Software Presentations : March 6, 2011
Notification of acceptance/rejection …………..: March 16, 2011
Deadline for Early Registration ……………….: April 4, 2011
Conference Topics
Effective Methods and Theoretical and Practical Complexity Issues in: Commutative Algebra, Geometry, Real Geometry, Algebraic Number Theory, Algebraic Geometry, Arithmetic Geometry and related fields: Algebraic Analysis of Differential Equations, Differential Geometry, Associative Algebras, Group Theory, Algebraic Groups and Lie
Algebras, Algebraic and Differential Topology, as well as applications in these fields.
Confirmed Invited Speakers
Johannes Buchmann (Darmstadt) Cryptograpy
Guy Casale (Rennes) Differential algebra
Anne Frühbis-Krüger (Hannover) Algorithmic resolution of singularities
Anton Leykin (Georgia Tech) Numerical Algebraic Geometry
Monique Laurent (Amsterdam) Real algebraic geometry
Diane Maclagan (Warwick) Tropical Algebraic Geometry
Pablo Parrilo (MIT) Convex algebraic geometry
Kristian Ranestad (Oslo) Applications of algebraic geometry to semidefinite programming, optimization and statistics
Duco van Straten (Mainz) Applications to mathematical physics
Executive Committee
Wolfram Decker (Kaiserslautern), Alicia Dickenstein (Buenos Aires), Sandra di Rocco (Stockholm), Mikael Passare (Stockholm), Ragni Piene (Oslo), Marie-Francoise Roy (Rennes) Michael Singer (Raleigh), Carlo Traverso (Pisa).
Local Arrangements Committee
Mats Boij (KTH), Petter Brändén (SU), Sandra Di Rocco (KTH), Mikael Passare (SU), Benjamin Young (Berkeley/KTH), Christine Jost (SU)
Advisory Board
Coordinator: Carlo Traverso (Pisa)
Isabel Bermejo (La Laguna, Spain), Arjeh Cohen (Eindhoven,Netherlands), Carlos D’Andrea (Barcelona, Spain), James H. Davenport (Bath, UK), Wolfram Decker (Kaiserslautern, Germany), Alicia Dickenstein (Buenos Aires, Argentina), Ioannis Z. Emiris (Athens, Greece), Jean-Charles Faugere (Paris-Rocquencourt, France), Andre Galligo (Nice, France), Vladimir Gerdt (Dubna, Russia), Patrizia Gianni (Pisa, Italy), Marc Giusti (Paris, France), Laureano Gonzalez-Vega (Santander, Spain), Gert-Martin Greuel (Kaiserslautern, Germany), Dima Y. Grigoriev (Rennes, France), Herwig Hauser (Innsbruck, Austria), Mark van Hoeij (Tallahassee, FL, USA), Evelyne Hubert (Sophia Antipolis, France), Rimvydas Krasauskas (Vilnius, Lithuania), Daniel Lazard (Paris, France), Gunter Malle (Kaiserslautern, Germany), Bernard Mourrain (Sophia Antipolis, France), Luis M. Pardo (Santander, Spain), Ragni Piene (Oslo, Norway), Tomas Recio (Santander, Spain), Lorenzo Robbiano (Genova, Italy), Marie-Françoise Roy (Rennes, France), Massimiliano Sala (Dublin, Ireland), Josef Schicho (Linz, Austria), Michael Singer (Raleigh, NC, USA), Pablo Solerno (Buenos Aires, Argentina), Frank Sottile (TEXAS A&M, USA), Nobuki Takayama (Kobe, Japan), Franz Winkler (Linz, Austria)

Purdue: Algebra and Geometry

The “Midwest Commutative Algebra and Geometry Conference”, organized by Alberto Corso, Claudia Polini, Bernd Ulrich and Yu Xie, will be held at Purdue University (West Lafayette, Indiana) during the period May 22 – 26, 2011.
This conference continues a well established tradition of Commutative Algebra and Algebraic Geometry meetings in the Midwest. Young mathematicians are especially encouraged to attend. There is a limited amount of support provided by the National Science Foundation through the Special Algebra Meetings in the Midwest grant (NSF DMS-0753127). The deadline for being considered for financial support is April 15, 2011.
For more information, please visit the website: http://www.math.purdue.edu/~ulrich/Purdue_2011/

Resolutions Day, Cornell

There will be a one-day conference on resolutions and closely related topics at Cornell Univeristy on Saturday, May 7 2011. The conference is organized by Irena Peeva.
Current List of Lecturers (ordered alphabetically by first name):

  • Alex Tchernev (Albany)
  • Alexandra Seceleanu (Illinois)
  • Frank Moore (Cornell)
  • Gwyn Whieldon (Cornell)
  • Hamidreza Rahmati (Syracuse)
  • Ines Henriques (Riverside)
  • Jeffrey Mermin (Oklahoma State)
  • Ri-Xiang Chen (Cornell)
  • Timothy Clark (Loyola)

Each talk will be 30 minutes.

Matrix Factorizations, Bielefeld

There will be a three day workshop on matrix factorizations at Bielefeld University on May 6-8. On the first day, there will be introductory talks by Igor Burban on the representation theory of matrix factorizations, Wolfgang Ebeling on the singularity theory of hypersurfaces, Daniel Murfet on the Buchweitz’s equivalent descriptions of stable derived category, and Ragnar Buchweitz on the theorem of Orlov relating graded maximal Cohen-Macaulay modules to the category of singularities. The next two days will consist of research talks. We hope these will demonstrate the wide range of topics in current mathematical research that relate to matrix factorizations.

For a complete list of speakers, a reference list, and other information on the workshop, see the website for the workshop.

Homological Day 2011, Lawrence

There will be a mini-conference at the University of Kansas on May 5-6, 2011, on several homological aspects of (non)commutative algebra.
There will be four talks, by Dave Jorgensen, Ryo Takahashi, Petter Bergh, and Liana Sega. The conference is organized by Hailong Dao and Olgur Celikbas. For more information, please see the conference web page.

Daniel Quillen

We have learned that Daniel Quillen passed away recently. The message below was posted to a topology listserve by his widow.

Dear friends and colleagues,
My husband of almost 50 years, Daniel Gray Quillen died quietly and peacefully on Saturday morning around 7 AM, April 30, 2011 at the age of 70. He is finally at rest and no longer suffering. In the last week of his life he was wonderfully cared for by the people of Haven Hospice. My son David, daughter-in-law Amy, daughter Cindy and I were constantly at his side. Dan died from the final stages of Alzheimer’s and the associated complications. We were able to follow his wishes of comfort and not making his suffering last any longer than nature had planned.
Alzheimer’s is truly a terrible disease. It was very hard to watch what it did to Dan over the past 5+ years. It stole the things he loved and took him from me too early. It first took his ability to do mathematics, then ability to play music, read, rational thinking and finally recognition of those he loved (except me, thank goodness).
I have no plans for an organized service. Dan’s body has been donated to medical science, following his clear and long standing wishes. If the mathematics community would like to organize a memorial service or a memorial colloquium we would be very pleased.
Please do not send flowers. I don’t know what I would do with them. If people feel that they would like to do something, I would very much support any assistance to your local hospice or to or Alzheimer’s research.
The work that hospice does in amazing and finding an answer to this awful disease is unbelievably important.
Thank you for all your support and friendship recently and for almost 50 years.
Jean Quillen
jeanquillen1@yahoo.co.uk