John Torrence Tate Jr. (March 13, 1925 – October 16, 2019) was an American mathematician, distinguished for many fundamental contributions in algebraic number theory, arithmetic geometry and related areas in algebraic geometry. He was awarded the Abel Prize in 2010. (Wikipedia).
Marcus du Sautoy on John Tates' work
Marcus Peter Francis du Sautoy is a British mathematician, author, and populariser of science and mathematics. You can view more content of Marcus du Sautoy here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYF21Xc9fSdqVWRxpBAOleQ/featured This video is a clip from the Abel Prize Announcement 2009
From playlist Popular presentations
John Tate: The arithmetic of elliptic curves
This lecture was held by Abel Laureate John Torrence Tate at The University of Oslo, May 26, 2010 and was part of the Abel Prize Lectures in connection with the Abel Prize Week celebrations.
From playlist Abel Lectures
The story of mathematical proof – with John Stillwell
Discover the surprising history of proof, a mathematically vital concept. In this talk John covers the areas of number theory, non-Euclidean geometry, topology, and logic, and peer into the deep chasm between natural number arithmetic and the real numbers. Buy John's book here: https://g
From playlist Livestreams
John Tate - The Abel Prize interview 2010
0:00 Glimpses of the Abel Prize ceremony [In Norwegian] 0:23 Speech by Nils Christian Stenseth, President of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters [In Norwegian] 1:15 Tate Receives the Abel Prize from His Majesty King Harald V of Norway 1:41 Interview start [English]. Your father wa
From playlist John T. Tate
INTERVIEW AT CIRM: PETER SARNAK
Peter Sarnak is a South African-born mathematician with dual South-African and American nationalities. He has been Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University since 2002, succeeding Andrew Wiles, and is an editor of the Annals of Mathematics. He is known for his work in
From playlist Jean-Morlet Chair's guests - Interviews
Alan Turing - Celebrating the life of a genius
Saturday 23 June 2012 marks the centenary of the birth of Alan Turing - mathematical genius, hero of the WWII code breakers of Bletchley Park, and father of modern computing. Alan Turing was a mathematician, cryptographer and pioneer of computer science who possessed one of the greatest
From playlist My Maths Videos
John Conway Circle Theorem Proof
An original dynamic proof of the late John Conway's Circle Theorem. Sadly, John died in 2020 from Covid 19. He has been described by fellow Mathematicians as a creative genius.
From playlist Summer of Math Exposition 2 videos
People of Science with Brian Cox - Dame Wendy Hall on Alan Turing
Computer Scientist Wendy Hall talks to Brian Cox about one of her personal heroes, Alan Turing, and discusses how his discoveries influenced so much in the modern world. Find out more about Alan Turing in our Google Arts and Culture exhibit: https://artsandculture.google.com/exhibit/peopl
From playlist People of Science with Brian Cox
Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for all the latest from World Science U. Visit our Website: http://www.worldscienceu.com/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/worldscienceu Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/worldscienceu
From playlist Science Unplugged: Physics
HLF Laureate Portraits: John Torrence Tate
The Heidelberg Laureate Forum Foundation presents the HLF Laureate Portraits: John Torrence Tate, Abel Prize, 2010. Interview recorded in 2016. In this series, join us as we meet with the top mathematicians and computer scientists – recipients of the Abel Prize, the ACM A.M. Turing Award
From playlist John T. Tate
Michael Atiyah: Poincaré conjecture, Hodge conjecture, Yang-Mills, Navier-Stokes [2000]
Millennium Meeting These videos document the Institute's landmark Paris millennium event which took place on May 24-25, 2000, at the Collège de France. On this occasion, CMI unveiled the "Millennium Prize Problems," seven mathematical quandaries that have long resisted solution. The announ
From playlist Number Theory
Solving Cubic Equations - Benedict Gross
Speaker : Benedict Gross Date and Time : 06 Jan 12, 17:15 Venue : AG 66, TIFR, Mumbai I will discuss a problem which has been central in number theory for several centuries -- whether a cubic equation in the plane has infinitely many rational solutions.This led to a precise conjecture by
From playlist Public Lectures
Geometers Abandoned 2,000 Year-Old Math. This Million-Dollar Problem was Born - Hodge Conjecture
The Hodge Conjecture is one of the deepest problems in analytic geometry and one of the seven Millennium Prize Problems worth a million dollars, offered by the Clay Mathematical Institute in 2000. It consists of drawing shapes known topological cycles on special surfaces called projective
From playlist Math
Elliptic Curves - Lecture 11 - The Tate module
This video is part of a graduate course on elliptic curves that I taught at UConn in Spring 2021. The course is an introduction to the theory of elliptic curves. More information about the course can be found at the course website: https://alozano.clas.uconn.edu/math5020-elliptic-curves/
From playlist An Introduction to the Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves
'DNA' Character Analysis: Jan, Mark and John Tate
In today’s video I analyse the characters Jan, Mark and John Tate in Dennis Kelly’s play ‘DNA’. The images were made using Dall-e artificial intelligence. Buy my revision guides in paperback on Amazon*: Mr Bruff’s Guide to GCSE English Language https://amzn.to/2GvPrTV Mr Bruff’s Guide
From playlist Dennis Kelly: 'DNA'
MegaFavNumbers - 1701936 knots
My contribution to the #MegaFavNumbers project. A brief introduction to mathematical knot theory, and a 19th-century Theory of Everything that didn't quite work out. References: J Hoste, M Thistlethwaite, J Weeks, "The First 1701936 Knots", Mathematical Intelligencer 20.4 (1998) 33-48
From playlist MegaFavNumbers
Knotty Problems - Marc Lackenby
Knots are a familiar part of everyday life, for example tying your tie or doing up your shoe laces. They play a role in numerous physical and biological phenomena, such as the untangling of DNA when it replicates. However, knot theory is also a well-developed branch of pure mathematics.
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures
Mathematics: the next 100 years - Oxford Mathematics Alumni Lecture
How will mathematics develop over coming decades? Impossible to predict? Perhaps, but a glance backwards might prove a fruitful guide. A panel of Oxford Mathematicians pondered past, present and future at our annual Alumni Lecture and found themselves talking not only about maths that we
From playlist Interviews with Oxford Mathematicians