(I am writing a post on hot trends in mathematics in the midst of war, completely ignoring it. This seems like the wrong thing to do, but my urge to write has overcome me. To any reader of this blog: I wish you a peaceful night, wherever you are).
Last week I returned from the yearly “International Workshop on Operator Theory and Applications”, IWOTA 2014 for short (see the previous post for the topic of my own talk, or this link for the slides).
This conference was very broad (and IWOTA always is). One nice thing about broad conferences is that you are able sometimes to identify a growing trend. In this talk I got particularly excited by a series of talks on “noncommutative function theory” or “free analysis”. There was a special session dedicated to this topic, but I was mostly inspired by a semi-plenary talk by Jim Agler, and also by two interesting talks by Joe Ball and Spela Spenko. I also attended nice talks related to this subject by Victor Vinnikov, Dmitry Kalyuhzni-Verbovetskyi, Baruch Solel, Igor Klep and Bill Helton. This topic has attracted the attention of many operator theorists, for its applications as well as for its inherent beauty, and seems to be accelerating in the last several years; I will only try to give a taste of some neat things that are going on, by telling you about Agler’s talk. What I will not be able to do is to convey Agler’s intense and unique mathematical charisma.
Here is the program of the conference, so you can check out other things that were going on there.