This page will no longer be used as of October 2025. For regular updates, see the calendar, and contact the Membership Secretary (Sizhe Pan, sp2219@cam.ac.uk) to be added to the mailing list.
[TMS] Jane Street Term Launch Social
[TMS] Garden Party, Cricket Match
Dear All,
Time: 6pm – 8pm
Location: Fellows’ Bowling Green, Trinity College (or, in the event of bad weather, Wren Cloisters)
Location: Cricket Pitch, St John’s Playing Fields (see map attached)
[TMS] Week 1 – Atiyah Lecture, Peer Talks II, AGM Results
Abstract: Although Michael Atiyah was a big influence on my whole mathematical career, our collaboration in the 1970s and 80s was on instantons and monopoles, gauge theories in 4 and 3 dimensions. The talk will discuss the role of spectral curves for hyperbolic monopoles, introduced in his 1987 paper, and spectral curves for Higgs bundles, a gauge theory in 2 dimensions, where his 1955 paper, written when he was a PhD student, sheds light on some recent developments.
Date: Wednesday, 7 May
Time: 5pm – 6.30pm
Location: Babbage Lecture Theatre, Cambridge CB2 3QZ
Time: 4pm – 6.30pm
Location: MR3, Centre of Mathematical Sciences
President: Arunav MaheshwariVice-President: Sida LiSecretary: Ryan BhaskarTreasurer: Yuv SaxenaMembership Officer: Sizhe PanConstable: Eleanor MacGillivraySocial Secretary: Tharrshann Logarajah
[TMS] AGM, Atiyah Lecture (Prof. Nigel Hitchin), and other updates
Time: 5pm
Location: Burrell’s Field Common Room
Here are the committee positions up for election, along with their official roles:
Eligibility: to run for a position, you must:
- Be a member of Trinity College.
- Email the current President, Eleanor (erm73@cam.ac.uk) by Wednesday, 30 April, announcing your intention of running.
- Prepare a brief speech to give at the AGM.
- TMS Peer Talks II (tentatively Wed 30 Apr)
- TMS AGM (Fri 2 May)
- Atiyah Lecture: Prof. Nigel Hitchin (Wed 7 May 5pm-6.30pm)
- TMS merch (coming soon!)
- (post-exam) Garden Party, Cricket Match (to be confirmed)
[TMS] Week 5-8 Updates
Week 5 – Pizza & Bubble Tea Social
Event: TMS Pizza & Bubble Tea Social
Time: 6pm – 9pm
Location: Burrell’s Field Common Room, Trinity College Burrell’s Field (58 Grange Road)
Week 6 – Professor Ben Green
Abstract: In a preprint posted online on February 26th, Hong Wang and Josh Zahl announced a proof of the Kakeya Conjecture in 3 dimensions. I will explain what this means together with some of the history of the problem.
Date: Monday, 3 March
Time: 6pm
Location: MR2, Centre of Mathematical Sciences
Week 7 – Prof. Richard Nickl
Title: Bayesian inference for infinite dimensional nonlinear dynamical systems and ‘data assimilation’
Date: Monday, 10 March
Time: 7pm
Location: MR2, Centre of Mathematical Sciences
Week 8 – Dr Kasia Warburton + Citadel/Correlation One Europe Terminal
Date: Monday, 17 March
Time: 7pm
[TMS] Week 4 – Dr Andjela Sarkovic
Title: Picking a spanning tree at random
Abstract: A spanning tree of a graph is a tree that includes all the vertices of the graph and whose edges are a subset of the graph’s edges. In this talk, I will describe a couple of algorithms for selecting a spanning tree uniformly at random from the set of all spanning trees of a graph.
Date: Monday, 17 February
Time: 7pm
Location: MR2, Centre of Mathematical Sciences
Date/Time: start of Easter (to be confirmed)
Location: MR2 (to be confirmed)
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Jane Street is organising a candle-making event for Women+ students this Tuesday, 18 February, 6pm! Details as follows:
[TMS] TMS Annual Dinner Registration
The form requires proof of payment to be included with the submission. Please upload an image as proof of £25 bank transfer with your CRSid as the payment reference.
Name: Trinity Mathematical Society
Sort Code: 20-17-19
Account Number: 40091049
Event: TMS Annual Dinner
Location: Old Kitchens, Trinity College
[TMS] Week 3 – Prof. Harvey Reall
Dear All,
This coming Monday, we are grateful to have Professor Harvey Reall deliver a highly attractive talk about black holes, Monday 10 February, 7pm at MR2, CMS. And, do hang around for pizza and port/juice after the talk!
Title: What happens if you fall into a black hole?
Abstract: The usual answer to this question is “you get turned into spaghetti”. But this only applies to the simplest kind of black hole – one which is not rotating. With rotation, the answer is less clear, with some calculations indicating that it might be possible to escape destruction inside the hole, at least according to classical General Relativity. Recent work suggests that quantum effects might play an important role in destroying observers who fall into certain types of black holes. I’ll attempt to give a simple explanation of all of this.
Date: Monday, 10 February
Time: 7pm
Location: MR2, Centre of Mathematical Sciences
[TMS] G-Research Pub Quiz
Dear All,
G-Research will be hosting a Pub Quiz in Cambridge on Tuesday evening, 25 February (Week 5); see below and the attached poster for details. Do sign up and come along!
