Possibly the greatest unsung triumph in mathematics is the classification of the finite simple groups, put together by literally hundreds of mathematicians over the last century. Simple groups are the "building blocks" of symmetry, and the classification throws up 26 oddities, including the infamous "Monster Group".
The proof - spread over some 10000 pages of journal articles - uses some quite impenetrable specialised techniques. But we can get a flavour of it just by looking at some of the simplest cases, using the work of Lagrange, Sylow, Lie, Poincaré and many others.
So join us as Dave McCormick takes us on a tour through the basics of finite group theory, as we classify all finite simple groups... of order less than 60. Along the way, we will meet three of the infinite classes of finite simple groups: cyclic groups, alternating groups, and projective special linear groups.
That's Thursday in MS.03, 7:30-9:00ish. Then we retire to the pub.


What's that image ? Is there
What's that image ? Is there a higher resolution version somewhere ?
Oh, all right, first page of google images :D
Nice one.
Actually we have a team of
Actually we have a team of artists that lovingly prepare each image for weeks, shaping and moulding the potential emotional roller-coaster of each and every discussion group into pictorial form. It just seems that google likes them too.