Automorphic Forms Shimura Varieties And L Functions


Download Automorphic Forms Shimura Varieties And L Functions PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Automorphic Forms Shimura Varieties And L Functions book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Automorphic Forms, Shimura Varieties, and L-functions


Automorphic Forms, Shimura Varieties, and L-functions

Author: Laurent Clozel

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1990


DOWNLOAD





Automorphic Forms, Shimura Varieties, and L-functions


Automorphic Forms, Shimura Varieties, and L-functions

Author: Laurent Clozel

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1990


DOWNLOAD





Automorphic Representations, L-Functions and Applications: Progress and Prospects


Automorphic Representations, L-Functions and Applications: Progress and Prospects

Author: James W. Cogdell

language: en

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter

Release Date: 2011-06-24


DOWNLOAD





This volume is the proceedings of the conference on Automorphic Representations, L-functions and Applications: Progress and Prospects, held at the Department of Mathematics of The Ohio State University, March 27–30, 2003, in honor of the 60th birthday of Steve Rallis. The theory of automorphic representations, automorphic L-functions and their applications to arithmetic continues to be an area of vigorous and fruitful research. The contributed papers in this volume represent many of the most recent developments and directions, including Rankin–Selberg L-functions (Bump, Ginzburg–Jiang–Rallis, Lapid–Rallis) the relative trace formula (Jacquet, Mao–Rallis) automorphic representations (Gan–Gurevich, Ginzburg–Rallis–Soudry) representation theory of p-adic groups (Baruch, Kudla–Rallis, Mœglin, Cogdell–Piatetski-Shapiro–Shahidi) p-adic methods (Harris–Li–Skinner, Vigneras), and arithmetic applications (Chinta–Friedberg–Hoffstein). The survey articles by Bump, on the Rankin–Selberg method, and by Jacquet, on the relative trace formula, should be particularly useful as an introduction to the key ideas about these important topics. This volume should be of interest both to researchers and students in the area of automorphic representations, as well as to mathematicians in other areas interested in having an overview of current developments in this important field.