University of Florida
Mathematics Department
Seventh Erdos Colloquium
by
Richard Borcherds*
University of California, Berkeley
on
Feynman integrals and the Bernstein polynomial
Date and Time: 4:00 - 5:00pm, Monday, March 7, 2005
Room: LIT 109
OPENING REMARKS
by
Neil Sullivan
Dean of the College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences
Refreshments: after the lecture, in Little 339
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Abstract:
A Feynman diagram represents a certain integral, which often does
not converge. Physicists regularize these integrals using a process such as
dimensional regularization. Mathematicians regard this as an
undefined
and completely meaningless operation, and try to ignore the fact that it
gives results that agree with experiment to over 10 significant figures. I
will describe how Etingof made sense of these integrals using the Bernstein
polynomial.
*
One of the world's most brilliant mathematicians,
Professor Richard Borcherds received the Fields Medal in 1998 for
his pathbreaking contributions to algebra and number theory. He began
his research career at Trinity College, Cambridge, England and joined
the University California, Berkeley first as an assistant professor.
He has held a professorship at Berkeley since 1993 and also has been
the Royal Society Research Professor at Cambridge University since
1996. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1993.
Erdös Colloquium *
University of Florida *
Mathematics *
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