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About me
In a nutshell
Ph.D., Princeton
My research is in Number Theory and Analysis. I study arithmetic objects,
specifically problems regarding L-functions, automorphic forms and periods,
using tools from spectral analysis, representation theory, and analytic number theory.
Problems I am currently pursuing include extremal behavior of automorphic forms
and periods in the high-energy limit and its relation to the underlying geometric,
functorial, and dynamical structures, and a number of questions regarding families
of automorphic L-functions, including explicit spectral expansions for moments
and specific instances of non-vanishing and subconvexity.
In Winter 2010, I am teaching Math 217: Linear Algebra and Math 289: Problem Solving.
Office hours are held Mondays 5-6PM, Wednesdays and Fridays 12-1PM. When proof problem
sets are due in Math 217, individual consultations are held on Tuesday afternoons.
Additional meetings are available by appointment.
I will be at Amherst College starting Fall 2010.
During the summers of 2010 and 2011, I will be visiting Centre
de recherches mathématiques in Montréal. During the 2011/12 academic year, I will be at the
Max-Planck-Institut für Mathematik in Bonn.
Documents
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