Revision as of 16:12, 20 July 2010 by Jweigand (Talk | contribs)

I'm Jamie Weigandt, I am graduate student in the department of mathematics specializing in Algorithmic Number Theory, Arithmetic Algebraic Geometry, and Arithmetic Statistics.

Note on this page

For the time being I will use LaTeX code freely when editing this page.

Random Thoughts About Rhea as I use it

  • Can we add LaTeX functionality with jsmath, at least for the pages relevant to mathematicians?
  • Can we add the option to "Open Poor editior in a new window"? The sidebar gets too big when I increase the font size to see in safari.

Musician of Number Theorist

This is game that my friend Beard and I invented. You go about describing someone, and then you ask if they are a musician or a number theorist. SPOILER: the one caveat of the game is that no matter how much the person sounds like a musician, they're always a number theorist. Clearly choosing Daniel Snaith or Noam Elkies is just cheating. :)


The Bigfoot Project

As a motivating project for learning a lot of background material I am engaged in what I consider a mythical quest to find an elliptic curve over $\Bbb Q$ with torsion subgroup $Z_2 \times Z_8$ and Mordell-Weil rank at least 4. Such a curve is affectionally referred to by my friends and I as "The Bigfoot." This nomenclature is somewhat misleading, such a curve, should it exist is not by any stretch of the imagination expected to be unique. I hope to expound on the status of this project at a later date.

For now I will be motivated in my development of this page by 3 facts:

  • My bank account is suffering from conference fatigue.
  • There is an essay contest for which I can win $100.
  • I'd like to stop eating at Taco Bell.

That being said I'll get right to this following section:

Why do I "math"?

I spent a few days spinning my wheels thinking about why I do mathematics, getting bogged down in details quite a bit. Then suddenly I realized that a friend had asked me this question just a month ago, at which point I'd instantly given a concise three-word answer.

I doubt this three word answer will be sufficient for anyone reading this who hasn't experienced a great passion for mathematics firsthand, so I will attempt henceforth to paint a picture of what went through my mind in the split-second before I gave my answer.

I've come to recognize mathematics as both a game and an art form, much like I fell profession musicians view their craft. Much the way that young musicians are inspired by previously established artists, I have my own mathematical "influences". First and foremost is my advisor Edray Goins. The two of us are both very influenced by Barry Mazur, whose enthusiasm for the beauty of mathematics is infections. (See this video about the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.) In his popular book Imagining Numbers: Particularly the Square Root of Minus Fifteen, Mazur compares mathematicians to bees.

Our gathering of the honey of the imaginative world is not immediate; it takes work. But though it requires traveling some distance, merging with something not of our species, communicating by dance to our fellow creatures what we've done and where we've been, and, finally, bringing back that single glistening drop, it is an activity we do without contortion. It is who we bees are.

While I immediately identified with these bees months ago I've found it even more relevant in the past two months. I've spent the last two months traveling from West Lafayette, to Switzerland, to Boston, back to West Lafayette, to Berkeley and finally back to West Lafayette to wrap up what my friends have dubbed MathTour 2010. This certainly seems to constitute traveling some distance.

As for merging with something not of our species, I've recently gotten involved with WIlliam Stein's project Sage, which has been compared by some to the ominous Borg from Star Trek. Reports of my assimilation are... likely accurate.

Through all of this, I have gathered several beautiful new ideas and techniques, which I've now brought back to my hive in West Lafayette. As Mazur says, it's taken work, but it's something I've done without contortion, because its who I am.

During the brief time I was in West Lafayette between my stays at Harvard and Berkeley, I discussed with whimsical nomadic lifestyle with a friend. She was somewhat overwhelmed that she'd soon be leaving West Lafayette and traveling around intensely for the foreseeable future. In mild frustration she asked me, "why do we do this?" It was to this question that I gave my aforementioned 3 word response, "because it's awesome!"

Alumni Liaison

Basic linear algebra uncovers and clarifies very important geometry and algebra.

Dr. Paul Garrett