Meet DTU Compute: Associate Professor Maria Montanucci

At DTU Compute we have the lecture series called “Meet DTU Compute” with the intention of giving everybody an opportunity to hear good colleagues from DTU Compute give friendly introductions to hot research topics.

The next Meet DTU Compute lecture will be given on December 5 at 13:00-14:00

Speaker: Associate Professor Maria MontanucciSection for Mathematics, DTU Compute

TitleAlgebraic curves in coding theory

AbstractWhether colors in the rainbow or notes in a musical scale, there is a natural human desire to categorize objects, and classifying shapes by their geometric properties has always been a fundamental mathematical research area. Here shapes are grouped into basic geometric objects such as points, lines, ?gures. However, most geometrical objects occurring in science are so complex that they defy this traditional mathematical description making it hard to classify them. One solution is to use algebra to see what geometric objects have in common, which entails describing them as a set of equations. In this light, algebraic curves are the simplest objects one can study, as in the plane they are given by one single equation.

For a long time, the study of algebraic curves was the province of pure mathematicians. But then, in a series of three papers in the period 1977-1982, Goppa found important applications of algebraic curves over finite fields, and especially of those having many rational points, to coding theory (reliable communication). Since then, many other applications followed naturally.

In this presentation, after a general introduction to coding theory and algebraic curves, I will describe the main ideas behind Goppa’s construction together with some more recent applications of algebraic curves in Information Theory.

Time

Mon 05 Dec 22
13:00 - 14:00

Organizer

DTU Compute

Where

DTU Lyngby