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                   THE 
                    FIELDS INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES 
                     
                    20th 
                    ANNIVERSARY 
                    YEAR  
                     
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                           JanuaryJune 
                            2013 
                            Thematic Program on Torsors, 
                            Nonassociative Algebras and Cohomological Invariants 
                             
                             
                            Graduate Courses 
                            Location: 
                            Stewart Library, Fields Institute 
                             
                          
                
                   
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                    April, 
                      2013 Course Schedule  | 
                             
                            
                   
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                                April 
                                  10-12:  
                                  Wed & Fri, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. 
                                  April 16-26:  
                                  Tues.& Thurs, 1-3 p.m. 
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                       Jan. 
                                  10 to Apr 5, 2013  
                                  Graduate Course on Algebraic 
                                  and Geometric Theory of Quadratic Forms 
                                   
                        Lecturer: Nikita Karpenko (Dean's Distinguished Visitor) 
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                       April 
                                  2-5:  
                        Tues.& Thurs, 10a.m.-12 p.m. 
                         
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                       January 
                                  14 to April 12, 2013  
                                  Graduate course on Algebraic 
                                  Groups over arbitrary fields  
                                  Lecturers: Vladimir Chernousov and Nikita Semenov 
                                   
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                       April 
                                  1-5:  
                                  Everday, 1 p.m.- 3 p.m. 
                                  April 8-11: 
                                  Mon. - Thurs,  
                                  1-3 p.m. 
                                   
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                       March 
                                  4-22, and April 8-26, 2013  
                                  Graduate Course on Reductive 
                                  group schemes 
                                  Lecturer: Philippe Gille 
                                   
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                      April 
                      9-11: 
                                  Tues. & Thurs, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. 
                                  April 15-26:  
                      Mon, Wed, Fri, 1-3 p.m. | 
                             
                           
                          
                          
                         
                        
                          
                         
                         
                          
                          
                To 
                  be informed of course schedule changes please subscribe to the 
                  Fields mail list for information about 
                  the Thematic 
                  Program on Torsors, Nonassociative Algebras and Cohomological 
                  Invariants. 
                         
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    Starting 
    Thursday, January 10  
    to April 26, 2013 
    Graduate course on Affine and Extended Affine Lie Algebras 
    Lecturer: E. Neher 
   
     The aim of this course is to provide the participants of Concentration 
      period I with the necessary background from the structure theory of affine 
      and extended affine Lie algebras.  
      Contents. Review of split simple finite-dimensional Lie algebras and affine 
      Kac-Moody Lie algebras. Extended affine Lie algebras: Definition, examples, 
      first properties. Reflection systems, in particular affine reflection systems 
      and extended affine root systems. Lie tori: Definition, properties, examples. 
      Relation between Lie tori and extended affine Lie algebras. Classification 
      of Lie tori.  
   
  Starting 
    Monday, January 14 to April 12, 2013 
    Graduate Course on Algebraic Groups over Arbitrary Fields  
    Lecturers: V. Chernousov and N. Semenov 
   
    The primary goal of the course is to provide an introduction to the theory 
      of reductive algebraic groups over arbitrary fields and local regular rings. 
      The main objectives are to give some basic material on their structure and 
      classification.  
    Background:  
      Linear algebraic groups have been investigated for over 100 years. They 
      first appeared in a paper of Picard related to differential equations. The 
      subject was later developed by Cartan, Killing, Weyl and others who studied 
      and classified semisimple Lie groups and Lie algebras over the complex and 
      real numbers. With the development of algebraic geometry, it became important 
      to study algebraic groups in a more general setting. The fundamental work 
      of Weil and Chevalley in the 1940s and 1950s initiated the development of 
      the theory of algebraic groups over arbitrary fields. Over the next thirty 
      years, the foundations of this theory (and of the even more general theory 
      of group schemes) over arbitrary fields and rings led to many important 
      results by Borel, Chevalley, Grothendieck, Demazure, Serre, Springer, Steinberg, 
      Tits and others. The motivation for this generalization was to establish 
      a synthesis between different parts of mathematics such as number theory, 
      the theory of finite groups, representation theory, invariant theory, the 
      theory of Brauer groups, the algebraic theory of quadratic forms, and the 
      study of Jordan algebras. Indeed, using the language of the theory of algebraic 
      groups, many outstanding problems and conjectures can be reformulated in 
      a uniform way. Nowadays this branch of mathematics is a very interesting 
      mixture of group theory and algebraic geometry. Over finite fields it classifies 
      almost all simple finite groups, over number fields it studies important 
      arithmetic properties of different algebraic objects such as quadratic and 
      hermitian forms, central simple algebras, arithmetic groups, discrete subgroups, 
      modular forms, over real numbers it clarifies the theory of Lie groups, 
      and so on.  
      The primary goal of the course is to provide an introduction to the theory 
      of reductive algebraic groups over arbitrary fields and local regular rings. 
      The main objectives are to give some basic material on their structure and 
      classification.  
    The course will begin with an overview of some notions and objects in algebraic 
      groups over algebraically closed fields and their properties (part I) such 
      as: subgroups, homomorphisms, Lie algebras, semisimple and unipotent elements, 
      tori, solvable groups, semisimple and unipotent elements, Jordan decomposition. 
      After that it will pass to the Borel fixed-point theorem concerning the 
      action of a solvable group on a quasi-projective variety. They lead to the 
      important conjugacy theorems and from them to the long road of the classification 
      of reductive groups over algebraically closed fields in terms of root systems. 
     
    Then the main direction of the course will shift to the theory of algebraic 
      groups over arbitrary fields (part II). This will be based on the celebrated 
      paper by Tits on the classification of semisimple linear algebraic groups 
      and the Book of Involution by Knus, Merkurjev, Rost and Tignol. As was shown 
      by Tits, any semisimple group G over a field is determined by its anisotropic 
      kernel and a combinatorial datum, called the Tits index. In the course these 
      two concepts will be systematically studied. In particular, the notions 
      of an inner/outer, strongly inner forms of linear algebraic groups will 
      be introduced together with explicit links to the theory of central simple 
      algebras, Jordan algebras and quadratic forms.  
    Prerequisites: The main prerequisite is some familiarity with Lie 
      algebras and algebraic geometry, like for example the first part of the 
      book Linear Algebraic Groups by James E. Humphreys.  
    Course structure: The course will run from mid-January until the 
      beginning of March so that students are well-prepared to follow the remainder 
      of the thematic program. Both parts will have approximately 20 hours. Arrangements 
      will be made so that the course can be taken for credit by participating 
      students. The final grade will be based on homework assignments. The solutions 
      of the homework problems will be discussed in tutorials.  
   
  Starting 
    Thursday, January 10 
    to April 5, 2013 
    Graduate Course on Algebraic and Geometric Theory of Quadratic Forms  
    Lecturer: N. Karpenko, Dean's Distinguished Visitor 
   
    Following [1, Part 1], we develop the basics of the theory of quadratic 
      forms over arbitrary fields. In the second half of the course we briefly 
      introduce the Chow groups and then apply them to get some of more advanced 
      results of [1, Part 3]. 
    Here is the program in more details: 
      1. Bilinear forms. 
      2. Quadratic forms. 
      3. Forms over rational function fields. 
      4. Function fields of quadrics. 
      5. Forms and algebraic extensions. 
      6. u-invariants. 
      7. Applications of the Milnor conjecture. 
      8. Chow groups. 
      9. Cycles on powers of quadrics. 
      10. Izhboldin dimension. 
    References: 
      1. R. Elman, N. Karpenko, A. Merkurjev. 
      The Algebraic and Geometric Theory of Quadratic Forms. 
      American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications, 56. American Mathematical 
      Society, Providence, RI, 2008. 435 pp. 
   
  Starting 
    March 4-22 and April 8-26, 2013 
    Graduate Course on Reductive group schemes  
    Lecturer: 
    P. Gille 
    Course Notes 
   
    Definition of affine group schemes, group actions, representations. Link 
      with Hopf algebras and comodules. Descent, quotients, examples of representable 
      functors (e.g. centralizers, normalizers). Diagonalisable groups and groups 
      of multiplicative type. Grothendieck's theorem of existence of tori locally 
      for Zariski topology, applications. Split subtori, root data, parabolic 
      subgroups, Levi subgroups. Classification of reductive group schemes by 
      cohomology, examples of forms.  
   
  Taking the Institute's Courses for Credit  
    As graduate students at any of the Institute's University Partners, you may 
    discuss the possibility of obtaining a credit for one or more courses in this 
    lecture series with your home university graduate officer and the course instructor. 
    Assigned reading and related projects may be arranged for the benefit of students 
    requiring these courses for credit.  
   
   
    For additional information contact thematic(PUT_AT_SIGN_HERE)fields.utoronto.ca
  
     
     
      
     
   
    
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