Web page for David Vogan (original) (raw)
My office is Room 2-383, at MIT.
Telephone: 617-253-4991
E-mail: dav at math.mit.edu
My office telephone is forwarded to me. I very rarely go to the office. Best way to reach me is email; I am happy to arrange Zoom meetings, or Google Hangouts, or Skype. Mailing to the office address is usually a bad idea; I will probably not receive such things for months after they arrive.
Even in these desperate times, I have not joined Facebook.
Acknowledgements
I have followed the department's instructions for creating a home page, and copied the home page of Richard Melrose. I regret the inevitable errors that this process must have introduced.
Pictures
With ever-growing admiration and constant affection, here are a few pictures of Fokko du Cloux.
Like everyone in the world, I play a small part in a YouTube video. Since the video is less than fifteen minutes long, I look forward to more fame in the future.
There is a small collection of family pictures; separately you can look at Venice, where Lois and I celebrated our 30th anniversary, (or with small pictures.)Lois and Allison's trip to see Jonathan in Brazil, a collection of math-related pictures, and (at the instigation of Tony Chiang) a collection ofstudio portraits of me. There are also pictures from my trip to China in July and August of 2004; these are also available as small pictures.
Mathematics
- The working/learning seminar Real reductive groups/atlas continues on Zoom Thursdays 10:30-12:00 in Fall 2020. Emphasis since the spring has been on understanding the relationships among Weyl group representations, reductive group representations, and nilpotent orbits.
- Some of my papers, (including slides from an introduction to the orbit method given at Bert Kostant's birthday conference in May, 2008), and my vita as a pdf file.
- Jeff Adams is leading an effort to bring the clarity and reliability of hardware documentation to unitary representation theory. The working title of the project is The Atlas of Lie Groups and Representations and you can find a (constantly growing) collection of interesting mathematics there.
- The Mathematics Genealogy Project. This is a database of mathematics thesis advisors and their students. Find out who your mathematical second cousins are, and whether you would go to Thanksgiving dinner with them.
- The AMS electronic journal Representation Theory
- Group representer Brian Boe has a collection of links to other representation theory people, and to some of their papers on the arXiv.
- The AMSRefs version of my file of references. These are the papers that appeared in bibliographies of papers written since I started using a computer. Slightly (that is, fifteen years) less up-to-date isAMSTeX version of the file.
- Along these lines, you can visitPaul Garrett's references, which are for automorphic forms, L-functions, and representation theory.
- There is a wonderful site at the University of St. Andrews for mathematical history, including biographies of more than a thousand mathematicians.
Characters of E8
Here are the slides for a version of the lecture "The character table of E8," in the version delivered at WPI on September 15, 2011. There was an article published in the AMS Notices of October 2007, describing the mathematical problem and its history more completely. The historical aspects of this article (contained in a sentence or two on page 1128) were inaccurate. You can find here a revision that tries harder.
You can also look at the AIM web site on the subject for a non-technical introduction. A detailed discussion of the software difficulties attached to the size of the calculation is in Marc van Leeuwen's lecture. The best picture is a two-dimensional projection of the root system of E8, made by John Stembridge from a drawing by Peter McMullen.
There is a web page for mathematicians who don't want to learn about this subject, written by
Fearless Project Leader Jeff Adams. If you do want to learn about the subject, visit the Atlas of Lie Groups and Representations.
Richard Duffy has kindly (to me; YMMV) provided an mp3 audio file for the E8 lecture. Michael Breen edited out some of the "ums," but didn't completely succeed in making me sound like Laurence Olivier.
For an extremely nontechnical account, go toAmazon's web page for the thriller The Wheel of Darkness, by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. Click on "look inside," and search for "E8".
A list of my current PhD students
- Timothy Ngotiaoco (timngo at mit.edu)
- Marisa Gaetz (mgaetz at mit.edu)
I was a student of Bertram Kostant, finishing in 1976.
A list of my graduated students (there's no such category as "former" student)
- PhD:2020
- Lucas Mason-Brown (lucas.masonbrown at gmail.com)
- PhD:2017
- David Rush
- PhD: 2013
- Eric Marberg (eric.marberg at gmail.com)
- PhD: 2012
- Peter Speh
- PhD: 2011
- Ben Harris (benjaminlharris at outlook.com)
- MS: 2009
- Tonghoon Suk (tonghoon.suk at gmail.com)
- PhD: 2008
- Jerin Gu (zerin at mit.edu)
- Miki Havlickova (marketa.havlickova at yale.edu)
- PhD: 2007
- Chuying Fang (cyfang224 at gmail.com)
- PhD: 2005
- Christopher Malon (malon at alum.mit.edu)
- MS: 2005
- Karen Bernhardt
- Nicholas McCarthy
- PhD: 2004
- Alessandra Pantano (alessandra.pantano at gmail.com)
- Wai Ling Yee (wlyee at math.uwindsor.ca)
- PhD: 2001
- Pramod Achar(pramod at math.lsu.edu)
- Thom Pietraho(thom at pietraho.com)
- PhD: 2000
- Wentang Kuo(wtkuo at math.uwaterloo.ca)
- Dana Pascovici (dana.pascovici at gmail.com)
- MS: 2000
- Evelyne Robidoux
- PhD: 1999
- Adam Lucas (alucas at clausius.ucsf.edu)
- PhD: 1998
- Hongyu He (hongyu at math.lsu.edu)
- Monica Nevins (mnevins at uottawa.ca)
- Peter Trapa (ptrapa at math.utah.edu)
- PhD: 1996
- Diko Mihov (mihov at deshaw.com)
- PhD: 1994
- Kian Boon Tay
- PhD: 1992
- Eugenio Garnica (garnica at servidor.unam.mx)
- William Graham(wag at math.uga.edu)
- PhD: 1989
- Jing-Song Huang (mahuang at uxmail.ust.hk)
- Iwan Pranata (Iwan.Praton at FANDM.EDU)
- PhD: 1988
- Hisayosi Matumoto (hisayosi at ms.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
- PhD: 1987
- Jesper Bang-Jensen
- William McGovern (mcgovern at math.washington.edu)
- James Schwartz
- PhD: 1986
- Susana Salamanca (ssalaman at NMSU.Edu)
- PhD: 1983
- Luis Casian(casian at math.ohio-state.edu)
- Joseph Johnson (jjohnson at queensu.ca)
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