September 16 - 20, 2019
Lipschitz-Saal (Endenicher Allee 60, Bonn)
Organizers:Johannes Anschütz (Bonn), Arthur-César Le Bras (Paris), Andreas Mihatsch (Bonn)
Description:
The Emerton-Gee stack is an object whose geometric properties reflect deep results about p-adic Galois representations of local fields. It is constructed using (phi,Gamma)-modules and Breuil-Kisin-Fargues modules with coefficients, and the study of its geometry is intimately connected with important problems in the p-adic Langlands program, including generalizations of Serre's modularity conjecture and the Breuil-Mezard conjecture. The goal of the Hausdorff school is to give a detailed and example-based introduction, accessible to PhD students and post-docs in the field, to the Emerton-Gee stack: its construction, its properties and some of its applications. Related topics, such as the relation between Breuil-Kisin modules and p-divisible groups, or the theory of (phi,Gamma)-modules may be explored as well.
Lecture Series by:
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Matthew Emerton (University of Chicago)
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Toby Gee (Imperial College London)
-
Bao Le Hung (Northwestern University)
Single Speakers:
- Sebastian Bartling (IMJ-PRG)
- Axel Kölschbach Ortego (Universität Bonn)
- Ariane Mézard (Sorbonne Université)
- James Newton (King´s College London)
- Vytautas Paskunas (Universität Duisburg-Essen)
Click here for the abstract of Emerton and Gee. These abstracts contain suggestions for your background reading.
Click here for the abstract of Le Hung.
Click here for the notes of the course of Bao Le Hung.
Click here for the notes of Matthew Emerton.
Click here for the notes of Toby Gee.
Person |
Affiliation |
Period of stay |
Grigory Andreychev | Universität Bonn | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Dario Antolini | University of Rome Tor Vergata | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Konstantin Ardakov | University of Oxford | 08.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Robin Bartlett | Max-Planck-Institut | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Sebastian Bartling | Institut de mathématiques de Jussieu | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Daniel Berhanu | Luxembourg University | 08.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Andreas Bode | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 | |
Andreas Bode | University of Oxford | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Guido Bosco | Sorbonne Université | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Ana Caraiani | Imperial College London | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Andrea Conti | IWR (Heidelberg University) | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Marco D Addezio | Max-Planck-Institut für Mathematik | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Matthew Emerton | University of Chicago | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
John Enns | University of British Columbia | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Jessica Fintzen | Universität Bonn | 07.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Toby Gee | Imperial College London | 08.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Sally Gilles | MPIM Bonn | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Quentin Guignard | Max-Planck-Institut | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Paul Jonas Hamacher | Technische Universität München | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Linus David Hamann | Princeton University | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Eugen Hellmann | Universität Münster | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Valentin Hernandez | LMO, Orsay, Université Paris-Saclay | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Quoc Ho | IST Austria | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Naoki Imai | Graduate School of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Tokyo | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Alexander Ivanov | Universität Bonn | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Ashwin Iyengar | Johns Hopkins University | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Christian Johansson | University of Gothenburg | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Axel Xavier Kölschbach Ortego | Universität Bonn | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Arthur-César Le Bras | CNRS | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Bao Le Hung | Northwestern University | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Daniel Le | Purdue University | 10.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Hao (Billy) Lee | University of Chicago | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Kegang Liu | Université Paris 13 | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Ariane Mezard | Sorbonne Université | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Yu Min | Imperial College London | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Yong Suk Moon | Beijing Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Applications | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Stefano Morra | Laboratoire Analyse ALgèbre Applications | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
James Newton | University of Oxford | 08.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Vytautas Paskunas | Universität Duisburg-Essen | 09.09.2019 – 12.09.2019 |
Cedric Pepin | Universite Paris 13 | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
João Nuno Pereira Lourenço | Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Vincent Pilloni | Université Paris Saclay | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Gal Porat | University of Chicago | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Mafalda Santos | Imperial College London | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
David Savitt | Johns Hopkins University | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Tobias Schmidt | IRMAR Université de Rennes 1 | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Peter Schneider | Universität Münster | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Benjamin Schraen | Université Paris Saclay | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Karsten Schrödter | University of Bielefeld | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Benoit Stroh | Sorbonne Université | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Pol van Hoften | Stanford University | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Arnaud Vanhaecke | ENS Paris | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Haoran Wang | Tsinghua University | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Yingying Wang | Universität Duisburg-Essen | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Torsten Wedhorn | TU Darmstadt | 09.09.2019 – 13.09.2019 |
Robin Witthaus | Universität Duisburg-Essen | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |
Zhixiang Wu | University of Münster | 08.09.2019 – 14.09.2019 |