Fields Notes, Winter/Spring 2019 Fields_Notes_19.1 | Page 9

T he Thematic Program on Teichmüller Theory and its Connections to Geometry, Topology and Dynamics was a tremendous success. There were a number of exciting activities throughout this six-month program that attracted hundreds of visitors from all over the world to the Fields Institute for collaborative research, discussion and lectures. The visitors represented an impressive breadth of mathematical areas, such as Teichmüller theory, homogeneous dynamics, algebraic geometry, and geometric group theory. It was particularly exciting to see so many women and young people represented among the speakers and participants. Some highlights include an introductory summer school, three workshops including a Sage Days workshop, the 2018 Fields Medal Symposium celebrating the work of Maryam Mirzakhani, the Coxeter Lecture Series by Fields Medallist Curtis McMullen, and three graduate courses, one of which was taught by the Dean’s Distinguished Visiting Professor, Mladen Bestvina. The Sage Days workshop (Sage Days 96) was held on August 13-16. It brought together students, researchers, and advanced programmers for a fruitful exchange. It was an occasion for newcomers to learn about Sage and for more advanced users to exchange their views. There was also time set aside for individuals to work on their personal coding projects with the help of the experts that were present. These included projects in Teichmüller theory, interval exchanges transformations, translation surfaces and train-tracks. There was also new code developed that was added to the source code of SageMath and so made available to the community. The Thematic Program represents a large and interconnected area of mathematics where major results use techniques and tools from disparate areas. To acquaint young researchers with these tools, an introductory summer school was held on August 20-24. This five-day school featured four exciting mini-courses: Arithmeticity of discrete subgroups by Yves Benoist (Université Paris- Sud), Homogeneous Dynamics and Hyperbolic Manifolds of Infinite Volume by Hee Oh (Yale University), Random walks on weakly hyperbolic groups by Giulio Tiozzo (University of Toronto), and Mirzakhani’s Work on Earthquakes by Alex Wright (University of Michigan). Each speaker gave four lectures. To facilitate learning by graduate students and people outside of the field, problem/discussion sessions were held in the afternoon. 7