Undergraduate Math Club Seminar
The Erdős Distinct Distances Problem Redux
Sam Bardwell-Evans,
Mathematics Department,
Caltech,
We return to the Erdős Distinct Distances Problem in R^2, as introduced in the earlier talk by Felix Weilacher: what is the least number of distinct distances a set of n points in R^2 can determine? We will begin by looking at an outline of the proof given by Guth and Katz of the best known lower bound, which relies heavily on turning the problem of counting repeated distances into one of counting incidences of lines in R^3. We will then look at work that is being done with Adam Sheffer to extend this proof to a general analogue of the original problem, namely the Erdős Distinct Distances Problem in the d-sphere. In particular, we will look in detail at the subsets T_{AB} of Spin(d) consisting of transformations bringing a given point A in S^d to a given point B, and we will look at how one can map these subsets onto d(d-1)/2-dimensional planes in R^(d(d+1)/2).
For more information, please contact Mathematics Department by phone at 4335 or by email at [email protected].
Event Series
Undergraduate Math Club Seminar Series
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