INTEGRABLE MODELS - Links & News:


BREAKING NEWS

GATIS Cooperation Partner

Torino University is a GATIS Cooperation Partner. GATIS (Gauge Theory as an Integrable System) is an interdisciplinary research and training network devoted to the development of Gauge Theories at the interface of Mathematics, Statistical Physics, Computer Algebra and Experiment. The partners of GATIS collaborate on providing excellent training opportunities for young scientists. The GATIS consortium is offering the status of a cooperation partner to selected academic institutions upon decision by its supervisory board. Cooperation partners receive information about the networks operation, and receive full access in the mentoring system for their PhD students and postdocs.

GATIS Fellow Awarded Academic Prize

Martina Cornagliotto (DESY), a GATIS early stage researcher, has been awarded a prize for her master thesis in memory of Prof. Alfredo Molinari by the INFN section of Turin.


EVENTS

Holography and Dualities 2016

30th March - 22th April 2016, Nordita-Stockholm, Sweden
The program organized by Nordita Institute, by the Marie Curie Initial Training Network GATIS and by the COST Action MP1210, aims to discuss new developments in dualities and holography. The holographic duality and Symmetries have played an important role into the physics of strongly-coupled systems and new non-perturbative methods.

AAMP13 (Analytic and Algebraic Methods in Physics)

6th June - 9th June 2016, Prague, Czech Republic
This conference is intended as the 13th issue of a conference series held in Prague since 2007, and is devoted to problems of analytic and algebraic methods in physics related to the quantum mechanics and spectral theory.

INTEGRABILITY: FROM STATISTICAL SYSTEMS TO GAUGE THEORY

6th June - 1st July 2016 École de Physique des Houches, France
The purpose of this school is to bring together young researchers with specialists from statistical physics, condensed matter physics, gauge and string theory and mathematics. We would like to provide the first with the necessary background for working in these rapidly evolving research fields, and to stimulate cross-fertilization of the different research areas.

IGST 2016

22th August - 26th August 2016, Berlin, Germany
This event continues the series of annual meetings "Integrability in Gauge and String Theory" which started in 2005. The aim of the IGST-2016 conference is to provide an overview of the subject, highlighting recent advances and bringing together experts on gauge and string theories, integrable models, mathematics and condensed matter systems. The meeting will also create a productive setting for discussions and interaction between researchers.


PROPOSED REVIEWS

Review of AdS/CFT Integrability
Niklas Beisert, Changrim Ahn, Luis F. Alday, Zoltan Bajnok, James M. Drummond, Lisa Freyhult, Nikolay Gromov, Romuald A. Janik, Vladimir Kazakov, Thomas Klose, Gregory P. Korchemsky, Charlotte Kristjansen, Marc Magro, Tristan McLoughlin, Joseph A. Minahan, Rafael I. Nepomechie, Adam Rej, Radu Roiban, Sakura Schafer-Nameki, Christoph Sieg, Matthias Staudacher, Alessandro Torrielli, Arkady A. Tseytlin, Pedro Vieira, Dmytro Volin, Konstantinos Zoubos


T-systems and Y-systems in integrable systems
Atsuo Kuniba, Tomoki Nakanishi, Junji Suzuki


Introduction to PT-Symmetric Quantum Theory
Carl M. Bender


The ODE/IM Correspondence
Patrick Dorey, Clare Dunning, Roberto Tateo



PROPOSED TALKS

Baxter's Operators, Boundary States, ODE/CFT and Beyond
Alexander Zamolodchikov, Rutgers University
Stony Brook University, October 16, 2012


An Overview of ODE/IM
Patrick Dorey, Durham
Stony Brook University, September 20, 2012


An Overview of ODE/IM Continued
Patrick Dorey, Durham
Stony Brook University, September 21, 2012


Colloquium Series: Gauge Theories, Strings and Gravity
J.M. Maldacena, IAS Princeton USA
Trieste, March 25, 2013


PT-symmetric Quantum Mechanics
Carl M. Bender, Washington University in St. Louis USA
Oxford, May 23, 2014



LINKS

GATIS (Gauge Theory as an Integrable System)

Durham University

University of Bologna

University of Kent

King's College London (Department of Mathematics)

University of Glasgow (Optics group)

The PT Symmeter