Programs & Events
Opening Event: Harmonic Analysis and Convexity
Sep 12 - 16, 2022
The interaction between harmonic analysis and convex geometry has been strong for a long time. However, in recent years new methods were developed that caused a steep rise in productivity of this cooperation. This workshop will include series of lectures introducing the participants to Fourier methods in geometric tomography, Bellman techniques for extremal problems of harmonic analysis, volume and duality, and computational aspects of the subject.
Harmonic Analysis and Convexity
Sep 7 - Dec 9, 2022
In recent years, the interaction between harmonic analysis and convex geometry has dramatically increased, which resulted in solutions to several long-standing problems. The program will bring together leading mathematicians in both areas, along with researchers working in related applied fields, for the first-ever long-term joint program.
The main directions of the program will include: the Fourier approach to Geometric Tomography, the study of geometric properties of solids based on information about their sections and projections, Volume and Duality, Bellman technique for extremal problems of harmonic analysis, and various types of convexity of solutions of corresponding Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman equation, as well as numerical computations and computer-assisted proofs applied to the aforementioned problems. The computational part will cover theoretical aspects (optimal algorithms, and why they work) as well as more applied ones (implementation).
Organizing Committee
- Javier Gomez Serrano
- Irina Holmes Fay
- Bo'az Klartag
- Alexander Koldobskiy
- Sergei Treil
- Alexander Volberg
- Artem Zvavitch
GirlsGetMath@ICERM: Summer Math Camp for High School Students
Aug 15 - 19, 2022
GirlsGetMath@ICERM is a five-day non-residential mathematics program that is open to high schoolers, regardless of gender, who live in or near greater Rhode Island and who will be entering the 10th or 11th grade in the fall of 2022.
GirlsGetMath occurs in an encouraging environment that builds young students' confidence in math and science.
GirlsGetMath expands participants' understanding and knowledge of mathematics through computations and experimentations.
GirlsGetMath provides expert mathematical training and mentoring.
GirlsGetMath@ICERM encourages 20-25 high schoolers to explore topics such as cryptography, the mathematics of voting, image processing, prime numbers and factoring, and fractals.
The goals of the program are:
- to show young adults that the study of mathematics can be exciting,... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Amalia Culiuc
- Katharine Ott
- Ulrica Wilson
Numerical Relativity Community Summer School
Aug 8 - 12, 2022
The Numerical Relativity community summer school aims to provide graduate students and postdocs with the tools needed to master and understand cutting-edge numerical relativity simulations. Our one-week lecture series is geared toward providing a comprehensive introduction to the numerical study of gravitational waves, relativistic fluids, and modified gravity. In addition, we hope to strengthen the ties between different code communities and plan hand-on sessions and hackathons to foster interaction amongst the participants. There will also be the opportunity for students and postdocs to interact with senior participants and lecturers of the ICERM workshop program.
As part of your application, please briefly answer the following questions in your personal statement:
- How does your research involve numerical relativity, or how do you plan to involve numerical relativity in the future?
- Do you have experience in computational physics and/or numerical relativity? Which,... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Scott Field
- Thomas Helfer
- Elias Most
- Leo Stein
- Nils Vu
- Helvi Witek
Research Experiences for Undergraduate Faculty Summer Workshop (REUF) at AIM, San Jose, CA
Aug 1 - 5, 2022
This workshop, sponsored by AIM, ICERM, and the NSF, equips faculty to involve their students in areas of active research.
The workshop is one in a series of annual REUF workshops that brings together faculty at undergraduate institutions who are interested in engaging in research with their students. The workshop is also a research renewal opportunity for faculty who want to reengage in research or are considering a change of research area.
The goals of the workshop are to promote undergraduate research in undergraduate institutions, and to forge lasting research collaborations among the participating faculty. The majority of the workshop will be spent working in small research groups on problems, reporting on progress, and formulating plans for future work. In addition, there will be opportunities for participants to continue research activities beyond the workshop week.
Accepted participants will receive support for travel, accommodation, and per diem. Preference will be given to... (more)
Fall 2020 Reunion Event
Jul 25 - Aug 12, 2022
The aim of this reunion meeting is to bring together the participants from the Fall 2020 program âadvances in computational relativityâ to work in a focused way towards solving the most pressing mathematical modeling and numerical simulation issues facing the gravitational wave community, and cultivating new subfields within mathematics that focus on important, pressing issues related to gravitational waves as well as providing mathematicians with new questions and problems to explore.
The areas of focus will be: (i) mathematical and computational approaches for solving the source-free Einstein field equations (a nonlinear, coupled, hyperbolic-elliptic PDE system) including fundamental aspects of general relativity or alternative theories of gravity, (ii) mathematical and computational approaches for the Einstein field equations with matter and magnetic fields, as well as the multi-scale, multi-physics modeling challenges for such problems, and (iii) methods for the detection,... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Stefanos Aretakis
- Scott Field
- Gaurav Khanna
- Stephen Lau
- Steven Liebling
- Deirdre Shoemaker
- Jared Speck
Lean for the Curious Mathematician 2022
Jul 11 - 15, 2022
Interactive theorem proving software can check, manipulate, and generate proofs of mathematical statements, just as computer algebra software can manipulate numbers, polynomials, and matrices. Over the last few years, these systems have become highly sophisticated and have learnt a large amount of mathematics. One has to be open to the idea these systems will change the way mathematics is done, and how it is taught in universities.
At the ICERM workshop "Lean for the Curious Mathematician 2022", experts in the Lean theorem prover will explain how to do number theory, topology, geometry, analysis, and algebra in the Lean theorem prover. This will be accessible to mathematicians without a specific background in computer-proof systems. The material covered will range from undergraduate mathematics to modern research. Participants will be invited to begin formalizing mathematical objects from their own research.
Application Deadline: March 7, 2022.
Organizing Committee
- Jeremy Avigad
- Kevin Buzzard
- Johan Commelin
- Yury Kudryashov
- Heather Macbeth
- Scott Morrison
Interdisciplinary Network Analysis Methods for Analyzing Social Systems
Jun 27 - Jul 1, 2022
The goal of this workshop is to introduce participants to interdisciplinary collaborations and conversations in network science that are advancing social justice research through the study of social structures. This workshop will bring together social scientists, digital humanists, computational scientists, and mathematicians with experience in network theory and network analysis in social systems. This workshop will also showcase how mixed methods research (which combines qualitative analysis and quantitative analysis) with multidisciplinary perspectives leads to deeper insights and more ethical and responsible approaches. Workshop organizers will lead tutorials in the mathematics of network theory, finding and working with network data, and qualitative methods for networks in the social sciences. We will emphasize and showcase the use of a critical lens throughout the process, from model building to data collection and analysis, connecting us to a broader dialogue about algorithmic... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Nancy Rodriguez
- Heather Zinn Brooks
Summer@ICERM 2022: Computational Combinatorics
Jun 13 - Aug 5, 2022
The Summer@ICERM faculty advisers will present a variety of research projects on the combinatorics of parking functions. This overarching theme will allow participants to study and analyze parking functions by leveraging computational techniques and theory. Faculty will also guide the development of open-source computational tools for analyzing parking functions and their statistics, with time devoted to creating a database of parking functions and their generalizations.
Throughout the eight-week program, 18-22 students will work on their projects in groups of two to four, supervised by faculty advisors and aided by teaching assistants. Students will meet daily, give regular talks about their findings, attend mini-courses, guest talks, and professional development seminars, and will acquire skills in free software development. Students will learn how to collaborate mathematically, working closely in their teams to write up their research into a paper.
Organizing Committee
- Susanna Fishel
- Pamela E. Harris
- Gordon Rojas Kirby
Data Science and Social Justice: Networks, Policy, and Education
Jun 13 - Jul 8, 2022
The Social Justice and Data Science Summer Research Program at ICERM aims to increase interest, research training, and capacity for data science for social justice, and to develop both quantitative and qualitative approaches to those professional practices that call for community engagement, critical inquiry, and interdisciplinary cooperation. In order to advance the mathematics community's understanding of the complexity of computational social justice work, the program will have four emphasis areas (1) networks, (2) policy, (3) education and (4) community-driven research. While the program itself is broadly computational and applied mathematics, researchers with expertise and interests in network science and analysis, open science and data, and computer science are particularly encouraged to apply. As a new field emerges at the face of computational and applied mathematics and social justice, this requires new methods for working across community lines. The organizers are committed... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Carrie Diaz Eaton
- Joseph Hibdon
- Drew Lewis
- Jessica Libertini
- Michelle Manes
- Omayra Ortega
- Victor Piercey
- Bjorn Sandstede
- Talitha Washington
- Tian An Wong
- Heather Zinn Brooks
Prediction and Variability of Air-Sea Interactions: the South Asian Monsoon
Jun 13 - 15, 2022
A challenge for mathematical modeling, from toy dynamical system models to full weather and climate models, is applying data assimilation and dynamical systems techniques to models that exhibit chaos and stochastic variability in the presence of coupled slow and fast modes of variability. Recent collaborations between universities and government agencies in India and the United States have resulted in detailed observations of oceanic and atmospheric processes in the Bay of Bengal, the Arabian Sea, and the Indian Ocean, collectively observing many coupled modes of variability. One key target identified by these groups was the improvement of forecasts of variability of the summer monsoon, which significantly affects agriculture and water management practices throughout South Asia. The Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillation is a northward propagating mode of precipitation variability and is one of the most conspicuous examples of coupled atmosphere-ocean processes during the summer... (more)
Organizing Committee
- Baylor Fox-Kemper
- Jennifer MacKinnon
- Hyodae Seo
- Emily Shroyer
- Aneesh Subramanian
- Amit Tandon
ICM-Day@ICERM
Jun 10, 2022
With this year’s International Congress of Mathematicians not being held as planned, ICERM is incredibly proud to host talks given by Brown University faculty who were originally scheduled to speak in person at this prestigious event.
We invite members of the community to join us on Friday, June 10th as Drs. Kavita Ramanan, Richard Schwartz, and Joseph Silverman give their ICM talks here at ICERM.