Number Theory and Physics
There’s a conference going on here at UT on Number Theory and Physics. Victor Batyrev, Philip Candelas, Daqing Wan and Dave Morrison are giving a series of lectures on the connections between Calabi-Yau Manifolds, Mirror Symmetry and Number Theory.
I’m sitting in Dave’s talk right now, and he’s patiently explaining Gauged Linear -Models to the mathematicians. Years ago, he probably would have said, “and now we take the symplectic reduction” ( or, more likely, “and now we take the GIT quotient”). Instead, he’s appealing to Lagrangian mechanics: minimizing the scalar potential, modding out by gauge transformations — the usual physicists’ way of thinking these about these things. Earlier in the day, Candelas responded to the question, “Why are we computing the periods of the holomorphic 3-form on a Calabi-Yau?” with, “Well, we want to be able to count the points on the Calabi-Yau, defined over the finite field .”
Role reversal?
Seriously, though, the connections with Number Theory seem to be indicative of something very deep. I have this forlorn hope that if I sit through the lectures, some glimmer of understanding will emerge.
Later in the week, I’ll probably duck down to College Station to catch a bit of the Cosmology and Strings conference at Texas A&M.
Posted by distler at March 13, 2004 4:00 PM