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Events

« January 01, 2010 - January 31, 2010 »
 
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Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

Discussion Groups are back for this term, starting with a talk about cryptography by Sir Alexander Thomas Aubrey Oakes, University Number 0624729.

Cryptography can be thought of as the science of keeping secrets. While you may not have any skeletons in the closet, you probably have credit cards, e-mail accounts, personal details and less than 5 passwords that you can remember. To protect these your computer uses algorithms that are publicly known and easily looked up by anyone. If people know exactly how your private information is hidden, how come no one knows that your password is a play on "Manchester City" and that you live in Chelsea?

It's surprising what information can be given away without fully compromising what's important. It is even possible to hold a conversation in the presence of a 3rd party who knows everything you do, and communicate without the 3rd party being able to understand what is being said. This in essence is public key cryptography.

After which, we secretly move on to the pub.

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Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

Dirichlet's Theorem on primes in arithmetic progression states that for any coprime numbers $ a $ and $ n $, we can find infinitely many primes congruent to $ a $ modulo $ n $. A stronger version is in fact true: each residue class contains the same amount of prime numbers: if you write a table of all prime numbers up to $ N $ and count how many end up in a given residue class (ie how many end up being congruent to $ a $ modulo $ n $), you will find that there are approximately $ N/\varphi(n) $. This means primes are equidistributed amongst the residue classes, as there are precisely $ \varphi(n) $ integers between $ 1 $ and $ n $ that are coprime to $ n $, and hence only $ \varphi(n) $ possible infinite families.

Something somewhat similar happens when looking at the splitting of primes in the ring of Gaussian integers $ \mathbb{Z}[i] $: the behaviour is essentially described by Fermat's Theorem on primes expressible as the sum of two squares. Indeed, any prime congruent to $ 1 $ mod $ 4 $ factors as the product of two prime elements of $ \mathbb{Z}[i] $ (for example, $ 5 = (2+i)(2-i) $) whereas primes congruent to $ 3 $ mod $ 4 $ stay prime in this larger ring (lastly, $ 2 $ ramifies in this ring: $ 2 = -i(1+i)^2 $, which means that $ 2 $ gains a repeated factor). So here we see that on average, half of the primes split into two factors, and half stay prime: this is related to the fact that the degree $ [\mathbb{Q}(i):\mathbb{Q}] $, as a Galois field extension, is 2.

This last observation actually generalises much further, and in fact this generalisation was formulated by Frobenius, who was unable to prove it. The Russian mathematician Chebotarev, however, was able to come up with a proof; this generalisation also gives us Dirichlet's Theorem as a special case. The method of proof, that Chebotarev allegedly thought of while carrying water from the lower part of his town to the higher part, has been invaluable in the development of class field theory. Indeed, when Artin first formulated his acclaimed general reciprocity law, he was unable to prove it; only later, after reading Chebotarev's proof, was he able to come up with a proof of his theorem.

Come to MS.05 to learn about all this, and more! After which we factor into the pub.

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Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

Just a short note to mention that today's Discussion Group is indeed happening; Ben Simpson will present us with his findings about category theory. Don't miss it!

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