ISSN 0002-9920 3 A N AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY 5 m o M e tic on ric es o ti an f t c h el M e A lo a m P th er la em ica c n e a M , t of the American Mathematical Society P ic at aw al hem November 2012 Volume 59, Number 10 Algebra and Lectures on Tensor Differential Equations Logic and Foundations t S a Algebraic Geometry Categories and Modular uc oc tic TGheeo mAlegteribcr Tahice aonryd of FBAuolenjxkcaotn oBdreasrk aKloirvi lalondv, Jr. LDYeuifcliftje uIrrleyeanss thoieannl kAEoqn auanadly ttioicn s CANo.. SmKh.pe Vnue taranedsbh lceh Faguinnctions ket, iety al Soc Quadratic Forms University Lecture Series, Volume Sergei Yakovenko Student Mathematical Library, R D iet KRiacrhpaerndk oE,l manadn A, Nlexikaintad er 2917;8 2-00-0812; 1282-12 6p8p6.; -s7o; fLticsot vUeSr;$ I3S4B; NSA: LE GVorlaumduea 8t6e; S20tu08d; ie62s 5i np pM.; ahtahrdecmovaetric; s, VISoBlNum: 9e7 189-0; 2-8020138; -126763 2p-p1.;; sLoisfttc UovSe$r3; 4; I 0 ist y Merkurjev US$17.00; Order code: ULECT/21 ISSABLNE: U97S8$-200-8.2251; 8O-3r6d6e7r -c5o; dLeis: tG USSM$/8816; SALE US$17.00; Order code: STML/19 28 rib Colloquium Publications, Volume Descriptive Set Theory 6 u 5967;8 2-00-0882; 1483-54 3p2p9.; -h1a; rLdiscto UveSr$; 8IS1B; SNA: LE Analysis Second Edition 1 ti Forbidden Symmetries US$20.25; Order code: COLL/56 D -modules and General Interest Yiannis N. Moschovakis US on Growth of Algebras Microlocal Calculus The Coxeter Legacy Mathematical Surveys and A C page 1386 and Gelfand-Kirillov Monographs, Volume 155; 2009; 502 e DReivmiseedn Esidoitnio n MTMMrooaadnnseosranlgka rMtia ioaKptnhhasess m o(hIafwi twMaicnsaa)a, trmVhaoi elSumemriaeets i 2cin1a 7l; RCEerhfialcenhcd tWiloen.r sED allanevdris sP, raEondjdei tcotirosns p4Op8r.1;d 3he-ar5r ;cd Lociodstev e:U SrS;U $ISR1BV1N/51;: 5S95A78L-E0 -U8S2$1288-.75; nter Daniel Quillen Günter R. Krause and Thomas GHr.a dLueantaeg Satnudies in Mathematics, 20U0-S80$2321; 182.-572407 ; 6pO6p-r.;6 ds;e oLrfi tscctoo UdveeS:r$ M; 6I2SMB; OSNAN: L9OE7 8/2-17 ATMh aceto hF-epiemulbdalstii cIcanatsli toSitncui eotenf cftoherse R(ATeMosreSoa nractnhod, i n Mathematical Physics page 1392 Volume 22; 2000; 212 pp.; hardcover; Ontario, Canada). 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Not available to SALE US$18.00; Order code: FIM/16 77 bookstores or agents. on hundreddss –15 1 About the Cover: 2 of titles! , N Irrational Symmetry Go to ams.org/bookstore to view ov e (see page 1390) the entire list of titles on sale. m facebook.com/amermathsoc b e twitter: @amermathsoc r 2 0 1 2 Trim: 8.25" x 10.75" 136 pages on 40 lb Velocity • Spine: 5/32" • Print Cover on 9pt Carolina INSTITUTE FOR PURE AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS Los Angeles, California Materials for a Sustainable Energy Future September 9 – December 13, 2013 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: Martin Bazant (MIT), Giulia Galli (UC Davis), Graeme Henkelman (University of Texas at Austin), Keith Promislow (Michigan State University), Matthias Scheffler (Fritz-Haber-Institut der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft) Scientific Overview A secure and sustainable energy future that is not based on a fossil-fuel based infrastructure requires the design of new materials for efficient energy conversion, transport, and storage. Indeed, materials development is a rate limiting step in many potential new energy conversion strategies, impacting the efficiency of photovoltaic solar cells, the storage capacity and power density of batteries for automobile applications, the synthesis of liquid fuels, and the catalysis and durability of energy conversion in fuel cells. A key bottleneck in this historic transition is the wide range of length scales present in the morphology and time scales in the transport phenomena. Serious progress in the development of new materials requires predicative modeling which surmounts the particle-continuum divide. Recent developments in macro-micro modeling, incorporating machine and manifold learning, combined with new classes of continuum models and increases in computational resources, provide a new framework with which to develop a fundamental understanding of complex materials. This program is part of the international initiative "Mathematics of Planet Earth." Workshop Schedule • Materials for a Sustainable Energy Future Tutorials. September 9 - 13, 2013 • Workshop I: Solar Cells. September 23 - 27, 2013 • Workshop II: Fuels from Sunlight. October 14 - 18, 2013 • Workshop III: Batteries and Fuel Cells. November 4 - 8, 2013 • Workshop IV: Energy Conservation and Waste Heat Recovery. November 18 - 22, 2013 • Culminating Workshop at Lake Arrowhead (by invitation only). December 8 - 13, 2013 Participation This program will bring together researchers from mathematics, physics, materials science, engineering, chemistry, biology, computer sciences, and other sciences with the goal to understand the mathematical structure of continuum models governing material properties as well as the electronic, atomic, and molecular structure of such new materials. Full and partial support for long-term participants is available. We are especially interested in applicants who intend to participate in the entire program, but will consider applications for shorter periods. Funding is available to participants at all academic levels, though recent PhDs, graduate students, and researchers in the early stages of their careers are especially encouraged to apply. Encouraging the careers of women and minority mathematicians and scientists is an important component of IPAM's mission and we welcome their applications. More information and an application is available online. www.ipam.ucla.edu/programs/mse2013 IPAM is an NSF funded institute AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY Math in the Media www.ams.org/mathmedia coverage of today’s applications of mathematics and other math news “Is That Painting “Puzzle Me This” “Fish Virus Spreads Real? Ask a Chronicle of Higher in Great Lakes” Mathematician” Education National Public Christian Science Radio “Added Dimensions Monitor to Grain Growth” “Team Cracks “Journeys to the Nature Century-Old Math Distant Fields of Puzzle” “Students Learn to Prime” Associated Press Rhythmic Beat of The New York Times Rap” “The Geometry “He’s Too Good NCTimes.com of Music” at Math” Time “The Science of Slate Magazine Steadying a Wobbly “The Monty Hall “Sensor Sensibility” Table” Problem” Science News National Public abcnews.com Radio “Into the Fold” “The Prosecutor’s Smithsonian “Muslim Tile Pat- Fallacy” terns Show Math The New York Times “Fast Routing in Prowess” Road Networks “By the NUMB3RS” The Washington Post with Transit Nodes” The Baltimore Sun Science “Art: Of Doilies and Disease” Discover See the current Math in the Media and explore the archive at www.ams.org/mathmedia DIDYOU KNOW that Elsevier: Has opened access to over 155,000 archived mathematics articles Is continuing The archives of the primary mathematics journals are to lower now freely available, from 4 years after publication back its journal to Volume 1, Issue 1 (or the first issue available), list prices which means back to early 1960s for several titles. We are striving to reach prices at or below Continues to US$11 per article (equivalent to 50-60 cents per normal support and typeset page on average), placing us below most expand initiatives university presses, some societies and all other for the commercial competitors. mathematics For 2013, this has resulted in further price-decreases. community Is a founding partner of We cherish our collaborations and relationships within the Research4Life, community and support, collaborate and engage providing partnerships to continuously improve our services and drive developing innovation and developments that are unique to the countries with mathematics community. access All of the Elsevier mathematics journals are included in Access to Research for Development and Innovation(ARDI), one of the research programs under the Research4Life umbrella. This ensures that mathematicians in developing countries benefit from free or low-cost access to our titles. For more information: www.elsevier.com/mathematics Mathematics Notices of the American Mathematical Society November 2012 Communications 1435 1423 Fall 2011 Departmental Profile Report Richard Cleary, James W. Maxwell, and Colleen Rose 1432 WHAT IS...Essential Dimension? Zinovy Reichstein 1443 Science Lives—Video Portraits of Great 1386 1392 Mathematicians Allyn Jackson 1445 Doceamus: Applications The month of November provides an eclectic offering. We Wanted: NSF Graduate have an article about a college professor returning to teach Research Fellowships in high school. There is a piece about the method of Stein in Meredith Berthelson and statistical analysis. And an offering about hidden symmetries. Jennifer Slimowitz Pearl Finally, we have a memorial for Fields Medalist Daniel Quillen. 1447 Scripta Manent: The Open —Steven G. Krantz, Editor Textbook Revolution Steven E. Barkan Features 1449 Mathematical Sciences in 1386 Forbidden Symmetries the FY 2013 Budget Samuel M. Rankin III Frank A. Farris Commentary 1392 Daniel Quillen 1383 Opinion: Improving the Refereeing Process: A Eric Friedlander and Daniel Grayson, Coordinating Simple Proposal Editors Brian Osserman 1408 Adventures in Teaching: A Professor 1384 Letters to the Editor Goes to High School to Learn about 1435 Galileo’s Muse: Renaissance Mathematics Teaching Math and the Arts—A Book Review Darryl Yong Reviewed by Anthony Phillips 1416 Archimedes, Gauss, and Stein Jim Pitman and Nathan Ross NNoottiicceess Departments About the Cover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1390 ooff t thhee A Ammeerriiccaann M Maatthheemmaattiiccaall S Soocciieettyy Mathematics People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1452 EDITOR: Steven G. Krantz ASSOCIATE EDITORS: 2012 Simons Investigators Named; Yun Awarded 2012 SASTRA Krishnaswami Alladi, David Bailey, Jonathan Borwein, Ramanujan Prize; Willwacher Awarded Lichnerowicz Prize; MAA Susanne C. Brenner, Bill Casselman (Graphics Editor), Robert J. Daverman, Susan Friedlander, Robion Kirby, Awards Presented; Martin Named Jefferson Fellow; Haldane, Kane, and Rafe Mazzeo, Harold Parks, Lisette de Pillis, Peter Zhang Receive 2012 Dirac Medal; Camacho Receives SACNAS Award; Sarnak, Mark Saul, Edward Spitznagel d’Alembert and Decerf Prizes Awarded; Singh Awarded Inaugural SENIOR WRITER and DEPUTY EDITOR: Leelavati Prize; PECASE Awards Announced; China Girls Mathematical Allyn Jackson Olympiad; Prizes of the European Mathematical Society; Pi Mu Epsilon MANAGING EDITOR: Sandra Frost Student Paper Presentation Awards. CONTRIBUTING WRITER: Elaine Kehoe Mathematics Opportunities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1459 CONTRIBUTING EDITOR: Randi D. Ruden EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: David M. Collins American Mathematical Society Centennial Fellowships, AMS Epsilon PRODUCTION: Kyle Antonevich, Anna Hattoy, Fund, Call for Nominations for IMU Prizes, Jefferson Science Fellows Teresa Levy, Mary Medeiros, Stephen Moye, Erin Program, NSF Graduate Research Fellowships, AMS Congressional Murphy, Lori Nero, Arlene O’Sean, Karen Ouellette, Donna Salter, Deborah Smith, Peter Sykes, Patricia Fellowship, AAUW Educational Foundation Fellowships and Grants, Zinni NRC-Ford Foundation Fellowships, AWM Essay Contest, AMS Depart- ADVERTISING SALES: Anne Newcomb ment Chairs Workshop, Mathematics Research Communities 2013, SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION: Subscription prices EDGE Summer Program 2013, Research Opportunities for U.S. for Volume 60 (2013) are US$547 list; US$437.60 Graduate Students in Asia and Australia, News from the Fields institutional member; US$328.20 individual mem- ber; US$492.30 corporate member. (The subscription Institute, News from IPAM, News from MSRI, News from Institut price for members is included in the annual dues.) A Mittag-Leffler. late charge of 10% of the subscription price will be imposed upon orders received from nonmembers Inside the AMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1465 after January 1 of the subscription year. Add for postage: Surface delivery outside the United States From the AMS Public Awareness Office, AMS Fellows Selected, Deaths of and India—US$27; in India—US$40; expedited deliv- AMS Members. ery to destinations in North America—US$35; else- where—US$120. Subscriptions and orders for AMS AMS Publications News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1466 publications should be addressed to the American Mathematical Society, P.O. Box 845904, Boston, MA Reference and Book List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1468 02284-5904 USA. 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San Diego Meeting Registration Forms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1509 NOTICES ON THE AMS WEBSITE: Supported by the AMS membership, most of this publication is freely Meetings and Conferences Table of Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1511 available electronically through the AMS website, the Society’s resource for delivering electronic prod- ucts and services. Use the URL http://www.ams. org/notices/ to access the Notices on the website. [Notices of the American Mathematical Society (ISSN 0002- 9920) is published monthly except bimonthly in June/July by the American Mathematic al Society at 201 Charles Street, Providence, RI 02904-2294 USA, GST No. 12189 2046 RT****. Periodicals postage paid at Providence, RI, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address change notices to Notices of the American Mathematical Society, P.O. Box 6248, Providence, RI 02940-6248 USA.] Publication here of the Society’s street address and the other information in brackets above is a technical requirement of the U.S. Postal Service. Tel: 401-455-4000, email: [email protected]. © Copyright 2012 by the American Mathematical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. The paper used in this journal is acid-free and falls within the guidelines es- tablished to ensure permanence and durability. Opinions expressed in signed Notices articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect opinions of the editors or policies of the American Mathematical Society. Solve the differential equation. dr t ln t + r = 7tet dt 7et + C r = (cid:19) ln t WHO HAS THE #1 HOMEWORK SYSTEM FOR CALCULUS? THE ANSWER IS IN THE QUESTIONS. When it comes to online calculus, you need a solution that can grade the toughest open-ended questions. And for that there is one answer: WebAssign. 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Learn all about it now at webassign.net/math. 800.955.8275 webassign.net/math AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY AMS Centennial Research Fellowship Program This program provides research support for outstanding mathematical scientists who have held a doctoral degree between three and twelve years Learn more about qualifi cations for this program www.ams.org/centfellow Application deadline: December 1, 2012 Opinion Improving the Refereeing counteracting to some extent the present march towards irrelevance of published versions of papers. Process: A Simple Proposal Switching to this system would also open the door to further experimentation. For instance, the second referee would not have to be anonymous, since he or she would We’ve all experienced the sinking feeling of opening a not be evaluating the quality of the paper. This would allow journal’s reply to our paper submission only to see a real credit for improvements due to the referee (in contrast rejection. Many, perhaps most, of us have had the misfor- to the currently ubiquitous thanking of the “anonymous tune to experience this in its most unpleasant and least referee”) and, depending on how it was implemented, defensible form: when the reply comes six months to a could put more pressure on referees not to simply rubber- year or more after the submission and the referee report stamp the paper. is so perfunctory it’s clear that no effort was made to Despite the present rapid pace of change in math- read past the introduction. I’ve certainly been through ematical publishing, I believe that the peer-review process this a number of times myself, with twists ranging from continues to play an important role in our profession. the comic (as when a referee stated that he or she had Unfortunately, in its present incarnation, it also causes mistaken the paper in question for a different one) to the a lot of collateral damage, much of it unnecessary. While tragic (as when some referees have clearly fundamentally the above proposal is no panacea, it offers a practical ap- misunderstood the main results). I’ve heard even more proach to addressing one of the most serious problems absurd and frustrating stories from friends. It’s hard not with the process. I hope that editorial boards will seriously to suspect that in some cases, referees take a negative consider adopting it. report as the path of least resistance to avoid the hard work of a thorough refereeing job. In theory, an editor —Brian Osserman may recognize a shoddy report and seek out a better one, University of California, Davis but in practice this rarely happens. [email protected] Some journals have taken an important step in the right direction by soliciting quick expert opinions prior to sending out a paper to referee, but more could be done and without very much difficulty. My simple proposal is to completely separate out the evaluation of the quality of the results and techniques—which can usually be carried out quite quickly and for the vast majority of papers is the sole factor determining ultimate acceptance or rejec- tion—from the more painstaking process of attempting to verify correctness. Thus, a journal would first solicit one or more quick expert opinions on a paper and then make a binding decision on whether the paper is good enough to accept, assuming the mathematics is correct. Only in the case of a positive decision would the paper be sent out for a thorough refereeing for correctness. Evidently, the great advantage of this system is that in principle rejections would always occur quickly, except in rare cases of unsalvageable mathematical errors. Also appealing is that it would be relatively easy to implement. Although it would create a modest amount of additional work for journals not already soliciting expert opinions, the benefits could be substantial not only to authors but to journals as well. As with the current expert opinion sys- tem, editors would be free to select more prominent and senior mathematicians for the evaluation of the impor- tance of a paper while choosing younger mathematicians with more time for careful reading to evaluate correctness. One could easily imagine that the first journals to adver- tise the adoption of this system would see an increase in the quality of papers submitted, and once the system is adopted more widely, the average delay between the public posting of a paper and its publication would decrease, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/noti912 NOVEMBER 2012 NOTICES OF THE AMS 1383 Letters to the Editor The Standards 2.0 surprised when several senior math- standards, mandating publishing I did a double take when I read the ematicians in my area expressed the errata or corrigenda for significant second sentence of Solomon Garfun- opinion that publishing an erratum results whose proofs turn out to fall kel’s “What’s a Math Educator to Do?” in the above circumstances should through or to be substantially incom- (Notices, August 2012, p. 909): “I truly not be regarded as mandatory and plete. The AMS should lead the way think that the Common Core State that acknowledging the mistake, in here, starting with its own journals. Standards for Mathematics (CCSSM) private communications or at one’s are a disaster.” webpage, may be sufficient. I had —Ilya Kapovich As I read on, it turns out that he always thought that publishing an University of Illinois “was actually on the writing team for erratum, if a published proof of your at Urbana-Champaign CCSSM,” will retrain teachers, will “be significant result falls through, is a [email protected] involved with the implementation basic tenet of professional ethics for of CCSSM,” “will work with assess- a research mathematician. The AMS (Received July 28, 2012 ) ment consortia,” “will sit on advisory ethical guidelines, adopted by the Not a Fond Farewell boards for curriculum projects,” etc. AMS Council in 2005, say as much. Between 1991 and 2001, I attended While the number of published math- In response to the adoption of a various open houses at my local ematical papers, and presumably the fellows program, I am letting my membership in the AMS lapse, as I do public school system. Every nauseat- number of serious errors in them, not wish to be a member of an orga- ing mathematics doorstop was bal- has been rapidly increasing in recent nization that is not egalitarian. The lyhooed as “meeting the Standards.” years, the number of published er- program will politicize the AMS and Therefore, I am appalled by Gar- rata, particularly in pure mathemat- have ramifications for hiring, promo- funkel’s clam concerning “the 1989 ics, has not necessarily kept pace. At tion, and tenure. It is only a matter of Standards of the National Council the same time, the tolerance among time before cries of discrimination of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM), the mathematical community for al- arise, and fellows are anointed solely which were never given a fair chance lowing incorrect published proofs to to achieve diversity. Adoption of this to succeed.” At a recent conference, remain standing without published program is the most foolish thing I heard a similar lame excuse from errata or corrigenda appears to have the AMS has done since I have been someone who has been a leading pro- been quietly increasing. After several a member. moter of the Standards since 1989. MathSciNet searches, I observed that It is not at all surprising that the applied math and physics journals —E. Frank Cornelius, Ph.D., JD latest promotion in mathematics were more apt than pure math jour- University of Detroit Mercy education is being peddled by many nals to publish errata, and that AMS [email protected] of the same people who are respon- journals have a fairly problematic sible for the Standards and “reform record here. From 2000 to 2011, (Received December 20, 2011) math” disaster of the past twenty- Communications in Mathematical three years. The hierarchy of the AMS Physics published 2778 articles and must speak up and expose those who 41 errata. For the same period Trans- AMS Fellows continue to play such key roles in actions of the AMS published 2966 I am declining the invitation to be an the continuing pseudo-education of articles and 12 errata, and Proceed- AMS Fellow, and I urge others to do American students. ings of the AMS published 5688 ar- the same. The many harmful effects ticles and 27 errata. By comparison, of this type of program were well ex- —Domenico Rosa Inventiones Mathematicae published plained in the August 2006 Notices by Retired Professor 817 articles and 19 errata. On the AMS past president David Eisenbud, Post University other hand, the Journal of the London who wrote, “A Fellows program goes Waterbury, CT Mathematical Society had even more against one of the things that makes [email protected] startling statistics: 1191 articles and mathematics special and wonderful: only 2 errata. I am not sure what ex- its uniquely egalitarian culture.” (Received July 28, 2012) actly to make of this data. Neverthe- less, I am certain that mathematical —Neal Koblitz Standards for Publishing Errata papers are refereed less carefully University of Washington, Seattle At a recent mathematical confer- these days than in the past and that, [email protected] ence I had several conversations with with the increasing pace of the num- other researchers on the uncomfort- ber of papers published annually, (Received September 4, 2012 ) able topic of publishing errata for the number of serious errors in math articles where proofs of some them is increasing fast as well. It is of the main results turned out to imperative for mathematics as a be incomplete or incorrect. I was profession to set higher and tougher 1384 NOTICES OF THE AMS VOLUME 59, NUMBER 10
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