M392C
SYLLABUS
INSTRUCTOR INFO
INSTRUCTOR: TAMAS HAUSEL;
PHONE: 471-7169;
OFFICE: RLM 11.168;
OFFICE HOURS: MWF 10-11am; also by appt.;
EMAIL: hausel@math.utexas.edu;
COURSE WEB SITE http://www.math.utexas.edu/~hausel/m392c/;
GRADES
Grade (A) will be given for either HOMEWORKS or ESSAY or TALK.
HOMEWORKS: Solve plenty (say at least 20) good homeworks from the Book, well distributed among the chapters.
Deadline for submission: May 2
ESSAY: Write an essay on a subject of your interest about an application of groups or/and symplectic geometry. Deadline for submission: May 2.
TALK: Give 25-50 minutes talk on a subject of your interest
about an application of groups or/and symplectic geometry. The talks will be
presented during the last two weeks of class.
BOOKS
During this course "Book" will stand for:
R. Bryant: An introduction to Lie Groups and Symplectic Geometry (pages 7-181 in
Geometry and Quantum Field Theory, eds: Daniel Freed and Karen Uhlenbeck
, AMS-IAS, 1995)
for differentiable manifolds and Lie groups: F. Warner: Foundations of differentiable manifolds and Lie groups.
Corrected reprint of the 1971 edition. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 94.
Springer-Verlag, New York-Berlin, 1983.
for symplectic geometry: M. Audin: The topology of torus actions on symplectic manifolds,
for classical mechanics: V. Arnold: Mathematical Methods of Classical Mechanics,
Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 60. Springer-Verlag, New York
for group theory: I. Shafarevich: Basic notions of algebra Algebra. I, Encyclopaedia Math. Sci., 11, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1997
SYLLABUS
We will roughly follow the following timeline (Lecture n means, Lecture n in the Book):
WEEK 1: Basic notions (group theory, differentiable manifolds, ODE's and classical mechanics) -- Lecture 1
WEEK 2-5: Introduction to Lie groups and Lie algebras --Lecture 2
WEEK 6: Group actions on manifolds --Lecture 3
WEEK 7: Symmetries and conservation laws -- Lecture 4
WEEK 8-11: Symplectic manifolds -- Lecture 5,6
WEEK 12: Classical reduction -- Lecture 7
WEEK 13: Kähler and hyperkähler reductions -- Lecture 8
WEEK 14-15: Student presentations
MOTTO
"We may as well cut out the group theory. That is a subject that will never be of any use in physics."
[James Jeans discussing a syllabus in 1910]