
Mathematical physics, including mathematics, is a research area where novel mathematical techniques are invented to tackle problems in physics, and where novel mathematical ideas find an elegant physical realization. Historically, it would have been impossible to distinguish between theoretical physics and pure mathematics. Often spectacular advances were seen with the concurrent development of new ideas and fields in both mathematics and physics. Here one might note Newton's invention of modern calculus to advance the understanding of mechanics and gravitation.
In the twentieth century, quantum theory was developed almost simultaneously with a variety of mathematical fields, including linear algebra, the spectral theory of operators and functional analysis. This fruitful partnership continues today with, for example, the discovery of remarkable connections between gauge theories and string theories from physics and geometry and topology in mathematics.
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Reducedness of quiver varieties
Yehao Zhou Shanghai Institute for Mathematics and Interdisciplinary Sciences
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Harish-Chandra bimodules in complex rank
Aleksandra Utiralova Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
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Quantum vertex algebras and cohomological Hall algebras
Alexei Latyntsev University of Southern Denmark
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Reflection in algebra and topology
Aaron Mazel-Gee University of Southern California
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Algebraically closed higher categories
Theo Johnson-Freyd Dalhousie University
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The anomaly of the duality symmetry in type IIB string theory
Arun Debray University of Texas - Austin
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On the perturbation theory for spectra in quantum mechanics
Maxim Kontsevich Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques (IHES)
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Twisted eleven-dimensional supergravity and exceptional Lie algebras
Ingmar Saberi Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU)
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Twistors, integrability, and 4d Chern-Simons theory
Roland Bittleston Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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Twisted Character Varieties and Quantization via Factorization Homology
Corina Keller University of Montpellier