Rankin Lecture 2024
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Rankin Lecture 2024

Rankin Lecture 2024: Notions of entropy in ergodic theory and representation theory

By Mathematics & Statistics, University of Glasgow

Date and time

Tuesday, May 21 · 4 - 5pm GMT+1

Location

Lecture Theatre 116, Mathematics and Statistics Building

132 University Place Glasgow G12 8TA United Kingdom

About this event

  • 1 hour

The School of Mathematics and Statistics invites you to

The Rankin Lecture 2024

Notions of entropy in ergodic theory and representation theory

Professor Tim Austin

University of Warwick

Wednesday 21st May 2024, 16:00 - 17:00 BST

Wine reception to follow at 17:00 BST


About the speaker

Tim Austin is the Regius Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick, and works in ergodic theory, probability, combinatorics and functional analysis. He was awarded a New Horizons in Mathematics Prize in 2020, the Michael Brin Prize in Dynamical Systems in 2021, and the Ostrowski Prize in 2021.


Abstract

Entropy has its origins in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics. It gained mathematical rigour in Shannon's work on the foundations of information theory, and quickly found striking applications to ergodic theory in work of Kolmogorov and Sinai. Many variants and other applications have appeared in pure mathematics since, connecting probability, combinatorics, dynamics and other areas.

I will survey a few recent developments in this story, with an emphasis on some of the basic ideas that they have in common. I will focus largely on (i) Lewis Bowen's "sofic entropy", which helps us to study the dynamics of "large" groups such as free groups, and (ii) a cousin of sofic entropy in the world of unitary representations, which leads to new connections with random matrices.