Welcome to Trivial Notions (2016/2017)

List of talks

All talks are on Thursday from 1:00 until 2:00 in Science Center 222 unless otherwise indicated.

(Click on the title of a talk to get the abstract.)

Date Speaker Title
22 September 2016 (from 1:30) Dennis Tseng How to parameterize a hypersurface
29 September 2016 Erick Knight Algebraic geometry for people who know neither algebra nor geometry
6 October 2016 Yuval Dor Model theory for people who know neither models nor theory
13 October 2016 Hunter Spink The Friendship Theorem for people that don't know theorems and have no friends
20 October 2016 (from 1:30) Chi-Yun Hsu Various compactifications of Siegel moduli variety
27 October 2016 Tom Lovering Philosophy and Functional Equations: Cox’s Derivation of Probability
3 November 2016 (from 1:15) Yusheng Luo Dominoes!
10 November 2016 Koji Shimizu How to compute a trace
17 November 2016 (from 1:30) Krishanu Shankar The Steenrod Algebra
24 November 2016 NO TALK -- THANKSGIVING
1 December 2016 NO TALK -- NO REASON
8 December 2016 Yihang Zhu Comparing Tamagawa numbers of different groups

Previous years Trivial Notions pages:

What is Trivial Notions?

The Trivial Notions seminar is held once a week in the Mathematics Department at Harvard University. The target audience is the graduate student body of the Department, and those giving talks are (almost always) graduate students in the Department. Talks can be on any topic, but they should be accessible to graduate students!

The seminar is a great way to find out what other students are thinking about. It's also a great way to practice talking mathematics in front of others, without the distraction of scary professors in the audience.

Any questions?

The seminar is organized this fall byAmol Aggarwal, Jake Marcinek and Alexander Smith. Please send one of us an email if you have any questions or if you want to add yourself to the schedule.

This page was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the previous year's one, which was based on the one from X years before, by David Harvey.