2026. 1. 12 ~ 1. 16
Seoul National University
All lectures take place in Room 101, Bldg 28 (28동 101호).
Speakers
Dongryul Kim (Stanford)
Yong Suk Moon (BIMSA)
Gyujin Oh (Columbia)
Koji Shimizu (Tsinghua)
Sug Woo Shin (UC Berkeley / KIAS)
Yihang Zhu (Tsinghua)
Schedules
1/12 Mon 09:50 -- 10:00 Registration
10:00 -- 10:50 Shimizu
11:10 -- 12:00 Oh
14:00 -- 14:50 Moon
15:10 -- 16:00 Kim
16:30 -- 17:30 Discussion
1/13 Tue 10:00 -- 10:50 Shimizu
11:10 -- 12:00 Oh
14:00 -- 14:50 Moon
15:10 -- 16:00 Kim
16:30 -- 17:30 Discussion
1/14 Wed No lectures (Excursion or private discussion)
1/15 Thu 10:00 -- 10:50 Shimizu
11:10 -- 12:00 Oh
14:00 -- 14:50 Kim
15:10 -- 16:10 Zhu
16:30 -- 17:30 Shin
1/16 Fri 10:00 -- 10:50 Shimizu
11:10 -- 12:00 Oh
14:00 -- 14:50 Kim
15:20 -- 16:20 Discussion
Abstract
Oh, Gyujin & Shimizu, Koji
Title: Moduli stack of isocrystals
Abstract: On a smooth algebraic variety over the complex numbers, any local system is associated with a vector bundle with flat connection, via the Riemann--Hilbert correspondence. Isocrystals are p-adic analogues of local systems for varieties over finite fields of characteristic p, which exhibit characteristics of both local systems and differential equations. The goal of this series of talks is to explain our recent construction of the moduli stacks of isocrystals. Along the way, we will explain the motivation for this problem and the relevant background in p-adic cohomology and the theory of rigid analytic stacks.
Kim Dongryul
Title: Mixed characteristic shtukas on Shimura varieties
Abstract: Taking the $p$-power torsion points of an abelian variety defines a $p$-divisible group, and a global application of this construction yields a universal $p$-divisible group over the Siegel modular variety. This ``$p$-adic realization'' of a motive can be generalized to other Shimura varieties and their integral models in many cases. We will discuss Scholze--Weinstein's theory of mixed characteristic shtukas and Pappas--Rapoport's construction of universal shtukas defined over Shimura varieties. We will also discuss how we may understand and define isogenies between points of the Shimura variety through its universal shtuka.
Moon, Yong Suk
Title: Spectral halo conjecture and Emerton-Gee stack
Abstract: The spectral halo conjecture by Coleman-Mazur and Buzzard-Kilford concerns the geometry of the eigencurve over the boundary of weight space; it predicts the ratios between Up-slopes and p-adic valuations of weight parameter over the halo region. We will discuss a (phi, Gamma)-module theoretic approach to this conjecture, based on the geometry of Emerton-Gee stack. This is a joint work in progress with John Bergdall, Brandon Levin, and Liang Xiao.
Shin, Sug Woo
Title: Igusa varieties
Abstract: Igusa varieties naturally arise in the study of mod p special fibers of Shimura varieties. I will discuss old and new results on Igusa varieties with emphasis on the problem of computing their etale cohomology.
Zhu, Yihang
Title: Towards Local Langlands-Kottwitz Method
Abstract: The Langlands–Kottwitz method aims to link the Hasse–Weil zeta functions of Shimura varieties with automorphic $L$-functions. A central component of this approach is a global trace formula that connects the cohomology of Shimura varieties to objects in local harmonic analysis—specifically orbital and twisted orbital integrals—which appear in the Arthur–Selberg trace formula. After surveying the current status of this field, we present a recently discovered local analogue of the global trace formula. This analogue relates the cohomology of certain local Shimura varieties to twisted orbital integrals. We conclude by explaining how this local perspective enhances our understanding of the global Langlands–Kottwitz program.