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The
conference will be held at the Independent
University of Moscow, located in the center of Moscow city. The
co-organizing and sponsoring institutions
are:
The conference "Transformation
Groups" is aimed to review the development of Transformation
Group Theory during last decades, to present the most bright recent
achievements in this area, and to discuss the perspectives of further
research. The conference will be dedicated to the anniversary of Ernest
Vinberg, who will become seventy in the summer of 2007. Professor
Vinberg is a major expert and active researcher in
Lie groups and algebras, discrete and continuous transformation groups,
algebraic groups and invariant theory. He has invented numerous
methods, proposed many conjectures, and solved a number of difficult
and deep problems (both alone and with his collaborators).
The conference is not intended to focus on a narrow set of problems,
but rather to present a broad look at recent progress in the field,
highlighting new techniques and ideas. Main topics of the conference
are:
- Lie groups and homogeneous spaces in Riemannian, Kählerian,
symplectic, and super geometry;
- Symmetric spaces;
- Discrete subgroups in Lie groups and discrete transformation
groups;
- Finite and infinite dimensional Lie algebras, conformal and
vertex algebras;
- Representation theory of Lie groups, Lie algebras, and algebraic
groups;
- Adjoint and coadjoint representations;
- Structure theory of algebraic groups;
- Invariant theory and algebraic transformation groups;
- Equivariant embeddings of homogeneous spaces, spherical varieties.
The motivations for the conference are to gather researchers working
on transformation groups in various areas of mathematics, in order to
extend their ideas and methods to a broader context and to provide an
opportunity for a broad discussion and exchange of ideas and experience
between mathematicians from various countries and of different
generations. Such an exchange would be most useful for those young
researchers who make their first steps in mathematics.
During the conference, there will be six working days (Monday,
December 17, through Saturday, December 22, 2007) with four one-hour
plenary talks (each day) and two half-an-hour sectional talks (on
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday). Five sections will be
organized. The poster session is also planned. The conference program
is available online.
The conference fee is 150 EURO
(except for participants from CIS).
It will cover lunches each working day, the conference dinner,
coffee-breaks, conference materials, and publication of abstracts.
The
list of participants
Invited
speakers:
Dmitri N. Akhiezer (Institute of
Information Transmission Problems, Moscow, Russia)
Dmitri V. Alekseevsky (University of
Hull, UK)
Leonid A. Bokut (Sobolev Institute of Mathematics, Novosibirsk, Russia)
Michel Brion (Institut Fourier, Grenoble, France)
Victor M. Buchstaber (Steklov Mathematical Institute,
Moscow, Russia)
Corrado De Concini (Università degli Studi di Roma "La
Sapienza", Italy)
Michel Duflo (Université Paris 7, France)
Alexander G. Elashvili (Razmadze Mathematical Institute, Tbilisi,
Georgia)
Victor M. Gichev (Sobolev Institute of Mathematics, Omsk Branch, Russia)
Simon G. Gindikin (Rutgers University, New Brunswick, USA)
Victor A. Ginzburg (University of Chicago, USA)
Victor G. Kac (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA)
Alexandre A. Kirillov (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA)
Friedrich Knop (Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nuremberg,
Erlangen, Germany)
Bertram Kostant (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA)
Hanspeter Kraft (Universität Basel, Switzerland)
Shrawan Kumar (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA)
Peter Littelmann (University of Cologne, Germany)
Alex Lubotzky (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Dominique Luna (Institut Fourier, Grenoble, France)
Alexander D. Mednykh (Sobolev Institute of Mathematics, Novosibirsk,
Russia)
Vladimir F. Molchanov (Tambov State University, Russia)
Viacheslav V. Nikulin (University of Liverpool, UK)
Sergei P. Novikov (Steklov Mathematical Institute,
Moscow, Russia)
Grigori I. Olshanski (Institute of Information Transmission Problems,
Moscow, Russia)
Arkadiy L. Onishchik
(Yaroslavl State University,
Moscow, Russia)
Alexander N. Panov (Samara State University, Russia)
Dmitri I. Panyushev (Institute of Information Transmission Problems,
Moscow, Russia)
Alexey N. Parshin (Steklov Mathematical Institute,
Moscow, Russia)
Vladimir L. Popov (Steklov Mathematical Institute,
Moscow, Russia)
M. S. Raghunathan (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai,
India)
Osip V. Schwarzman (Independent University
of Moscow, Russia)
Tonny A. Springer (Utrecht University, Netherlands)
Irina D. Suprunenko (Institute of Mathematics, Minsk, Belarus)
Nikolai A. Vavilov (St. Petersburg State University, Russia)
Anatoly M. Vershik (Steklov Mathematical Institute, St. Petersburg
Dept., Russia)
Andrei Yu. Vesnin (Sobolev Institute of Mathematics, Novosibirsk,
Russia)
Valentin E. Voskresensky (Samara State University, Russia)
Abstracts
The abstracts of the talks will
be published by the opening of the conference in a booklet for the
participants. Unfortunately, time limits do not allow everybody to
speak at the
conference. We hope on your
understanding. All participants are invited to present posters of their
talks.
Location
The Independent
University
of Moscow (IUM) is located in the historical center of Moscow city
at the address: Bolshoy Vlasyevskiy Pereulok (side-street) 11. The
closest metro stations are "Smolenskaya" and "Kropotkinskaya".
Here is
a brief description of how to get to IUM:
From "Smolenskaya":
Cross Arbat street near "MacDonalds", pass one block along Denezhny
side-street (the monumental building of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
will be on your right), then turn to the left and pass two blocks along
Sivtsev Vrazhek side-street. Turn to the right and walk about 20 meters
along Bolshoy Vlasyevskiy
side-street. IUM is located on your right in a four-storey building
inside the yard.
From "Kropotkinskaya":
Get out of the metro through the exit to the Gogolevskiy boulevard.
Pass through the arch, turn to the left and cross the boulevard. Pass
five blocks along Gagarinskiy side-street, then turn to the right and
walk about 50 meters along Bolshoy Vlasyevskiy side-street. IUM is
located on your left in a four-storey building inside the yard.
You may also consult the map of the
environs of IUM.
Accommodation
The local organizers are ready to book rooms in Moscow hotels for
registered participants. We recommend the accommodation at the hotel "Izmailovo".
For
general information on hotels in Moscow, please consult http://www.moscow-hotels-russia.com
or http://www.hotels-moscow.ru.
Organizing
Committee:
Ivan
V. Arzhantsev
(Moscow State University)
David A. Ellwood
(Clay Mathematics Institute)
Yulij
S. Ilyashenko
(Independent University of Moscow, Cornell University)
Victor
G. Kac
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology),
co-chairman
Alexandre
A.
Kirillov (University of Pennsylvania)
Arkadiy L. Onishchik
(Yaroslavl State University),
co-chairman
Alexey N. Parshin
(Steklov Mathematical Institute)
Dmitri A. Timashev
(Moscow State University)
Michael
A. Tsfasman (J.-V. Poncelet French-Russian Mathematics Laboratory)