Sage Days 21: Function Fields

Pictures: photos from Sage Days

Logistics

Organizers: William Stein, Chris Hall, Craig Citro, Salman Baig

Location: The Shuey House, 5218 16th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105

Dates: May 24 - 28, 2010 (check in on May 23rd after 4:00pm, check out on May 29th by 10:30am)

Mailing list: Group page.

Projects

Wireless Account

UW NetID: event0210

Password: 77Uw-52Kf-54Ga

Housing

A handful of visitors will be staying at the Shuey House, while the remaining visitors have rooms on hold for them at Hotel Deca (4507 Brooklyn Avenue NE, Seattle, WA 98105). The tentative housing arrangement is as follows:

The Shuey House

Hotel Deca

Getting to the Shuey House/Hotel Deca from Seattle-Tacoma

Here are some options to get to the Shuey House or Hotel Deca from the airport:

Getting Around

Both the Shuey House and Hotel Deca are close to the UW campus as well as plenty of restaurants, coffee shops, etc. You will find that you can walk to nearly anything you like from the house or hotel, so a car is probably unnecessary. If you do plan on renting a car, please let me (Salman) know, and I will provide you information on parking, getting to/from the hotel, etc.

Seattle also has a well-connected bus system, which can be used if you want to get out of the University District and explore the rest of the city. Talk to Craig or Salman if you have any questions about riding the buses.

Map

Here's a Google map with the major locations marked.

This is a campus map that shows the location of Padelford (the Math department) and Savery and Thomson Halls (where talks on Monday will be).

Participants

Informal Talks

Schedule

We will have one full day of organized talks, followed by working sessions and status reports the rest of the week. Informal talks are also welcome and will be left to individuals and working groups to organize.

Monday, May 24

9:30am - 9:45am

Welcome and Breakfast

Savery Hall 155

9:45am - 10:45am

Function Fields and Number Fields

Savery Hall 155

D. Ulmer

Slides (careful ... very broadbrush)

10:45am - 11:20am

An Introduction to Sage for Number Theorists

Savery Hall 155

C. Citro

11:30am - 1:30pm

Lunch

1:30pm - 2:30pm

Drinfeld Modular Forms and Harmonic Cocycles

Thomson Hall 231

G. Boeckle

Slides

2:30pm - 3:30pm

Computing Drinfeld Modular Forms

Thomson Hall 231

R. Butenuth

Slides

3:30pm - 4:30pm

Tea

Parnassus

4:30pm - 5:30pm

Calculating L-functions over F_q(t)

Savery Hall 139

C. Hall

5:30pm - 6:30pm

Organizational meeting

Savery Hall 139

7:30pm - 9pm'ish

Dinner

Piatti (U-Village)

Please let me know as soon as possible if you will be able to attend the dinner on Monday night for the group.

William's Sage Class

William will talk about "how to do Sage development" in his undergraduate Sage class on Wednesday and Friday:

Talk Abstracts

Function Fields and Number Fields (Ulmer): I will try to explain some of the analogies between arithmetic in these two domains and also why we can often do more in the function field setting.

An Introduction to Sage for Number Theorists (Citro): I will give a short introduction to Sage, highlighting aspects that are particularly relevant for number theory. You are welcome to come armed with questions, especially of the "can Sage do <insert your favorite thing here>" variety.

Drinfeld Modular Forms and Harmonic Cocycles (Boeckle): In this talk I shall introduce the main concepts needed to understand Drinfeld cusp forms and the combinatorics that allows their computation: The Bruhat-Tits tree, Drinfeld's symmetric space, the cusp forms and harmonic cocycles. I shall state many of the basic theorems including some of Teitelbaum's work relating Drinfeld cusp forms and harmonic cocycles. I will also present a (very incomplete and subjective) list of open questions.

Computing Drinfeld Modular Forms (Butenuth): Drinfeld modular forms can be related to harmonic cochains, which are functions on the edges of the Bruhat-Tits tree fulfilling certain properties. In my talk I will try to explain how to relate Drinfeld modular forms to these objects and how to explicitly compute Hecke operators on them. The slides to the talk can be downloaded here.

Calculating L-functions over F_q(t) (Hall): We discuss solutions to the problem of computing the L-function of a non-constant elliptic curve E/F_q(t). Concretely it is a polynomial with coefficients in Z and can be computed in O(q^m) operations for some integer m=m(E) depending on E. The naive approach via point counting works but at the expense of a 'large' m(E). However, given enough information about one E/F_q(t), the relative cost of computing a 'related' elliptic curve's L-function is smaller. One can consider a quadratic twist or, more generally, a 'pullback' and the 'primitive' part of its L-function. We'll elaborate on these themes in the talk and introduce a library we are developing for calculating L-functions.

Tuesday, May 25

Free day to work or organize talks.

Wednesday, May 26

11:00am - 12:00pm

Status reports

Shuey House

Thursday, May 27

Free day to work or organize talks.

Friday, May 28

11:00am - 12:00pm

Final status reports

Shuey House

Reading List

A reading list can be found here where participants can add items as well.

daysff (last edited 2010-05-28 22:34:44 by AlysonDeines)