Present: Peter Giblin (Chair), John Hunton (Leicester), Alex Clark (Leicester), Peter Fleischmann
(Kent), James Shank (Kent), David Jordan (Sheffield), Peter Cameron (Queen Mary), Mark Haskins
(Imperial), Charles Goldie (LMS), Sandra Pott (LMS), Isabelle Robinson (LMS, standing-in for
Fiona Nixon).
(i) a public lecture on the life and work of Alan Turing by Dr Andrew Hodges (Oxford);
(ii) the mathematical aspects of Turing's work by Professor Solomon Feferman (Stanford);
(iii) Professor Christine Bessenrodt (Hannover);
(iv) Professor Martin Lorenz (Temple, Philadelphia);
(v) Professor Idun Reiten (Trondheim);
(vi) Professor Christiane Tretter (Bern).
GCHQ has agreed to provide financial support to help pay the expenses (including a business class flight) for Solomon Feferman to give a plenary lecture at the BMC and to give a talk at the Heilbronn Institute.
The BMC will include five workshops: Turing's Legacy, Noncommutative Geometry, Algebraic Transformation Groups, Operator Theory, Mathematical Physics.
The Kent organisers asked the Committee's opinion on seeking sponsorship for lectures, workshops and other events. It was agreed that anything short of endorsement was acceptable.
However, some care should be taken in selecting sponsors and, for a sponsored lecture, the permission of the lecturer would be required.
CG warned the Kent organisers to watch for late unexpected fees. PG asked if Leicester's experience would help. JS asked JH to provide a summary of Leicester's experience highlighting the nature of the Vice Chancellor's support.
A call for suggestions for morning speakers was made. MH suggested Andre Neves (Imperial). Further suggestions should be sent to the Secretary. (R.J.Shank@kent.ac.uk).
MH asked whether EPSRC/LMS/LTCC courses might be arranged in conjunction the BMC.
IR commented that the LMS contract expires in October. JH: while PhD education should be encouraged, it would be unfortunate if the BMC became simply an education event.
(i) Analysis: Michele Vergne (Jussieu), Claire Anantharaman-Delaroche (Orleans) (Operator
Algebras special session 2000), Ulrike Tillmann (Oxford) (morning speaker 2000, 2002);
(ii) Number Theory: Martin Taylor (Oxford) (morning speaker 1997, 1981), Richard Taylor
(Harvard) (morning speaker 1995), Don Zagier (plenary 1985), Ken Ribet (Berkeley), Andrew
Wiles (Oxford) (plenary 1996);
(iii) Algebra: Maxim Kontsevich (IHES), Bernhard Keller (Jussieu);
(iv) Probability: Louigi Addario-Berry (McGill), Margit Rosler (Clausthal), Laurent Saloffe-
Coste (Cornell), (Wendolin Werner whose plenary talk in 2005 is too recent.);
(v) Category Theory: Mikhail Kapranov (Yale), Ezra Getzler (Northwestern).
From CG: Cedric Villani, Terry Tao, to be approached through some colleague whom they'll
know; Karl-Theodor Sturm (Inst fur Angewandte Math., Bonn, probability/analysis); Rene
Schilling, (Dresden, probability). Herbert Spohn (T.U. Munich, probability/mathematical
physics, 2011 Eisenbud Prizewinner).
The six proposed workshops are: Category Theory, Probability, Number Theory*, Algebra/Representation Theory*, Topology*, K-Theory and Index Theory (analytic). Here *
indicates a potential LMS Scheme 3 involvement. Titles are fluid.
SP suggested more analytic topics. JH noted that workshops don't need a local organiser.