topics for an undergraduate Math seminar

Not all of the above points are required, but as long as it satisfies most of the above it should be relevant. Above all else, if you think it is a good topic idea please share it.

Edit: If you have books or resources for the seminar topic, that is also very helpful.

asked Jan 30, 2017 at 19:32 279 1 1 gold badge 2 2 silver badges 5 5 bronze badges

$\begingroup$ Seminar in the sense of a voluntary meeting that undergraduates can attend (presumably with presentations given by faculty?), to learn some "extracurricular" math? $\endgroup$

Commented Jan 31, 2017 at 3:23

$\begingroup$ @pjs36 That is precisely what I am referring to. I am trying to help one of my professors choose a topic for the next one. I tried to distance the question from my particular situation, so that it would be more useful. I'm just looking for a topic that will draw attention and that my professor would like to present on. $\endgroup$

Commented Jan 31, 2017 at 15:43

$\begingroup$ If your professor can't come up with any ideas for a talk to undergraduates, why is the professor involved in this activity? $\endgroup$

Commented Feb 1, 2017 at 11:03

$\begingroup$ @KCd He has plenty of ideas I am sure. I think he would like a fresh take on ideas, though he is probably just giving me a chance to be involved in planning events. $\endgroup$

Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 5:52 $\begingroup$ See also: math.stackexchange.com/questions/2095649/… $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 21, 2017 at 15:21

11 Answers 11

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We run a weekly seminar at my university where undergrads give math talks to other undergrads. To encourage people to give talks we collected a list of suggested topics which may be useful to you -- https://uwseminars.com/potential-topics/

EDIT: As suggested by Joel, I'll add a few of my favourite ones from the list (there are 83 topics now, but the number will increase this term).

1) Continued Fractions and Hyperbolic Geometry (Farey tesselation etc): Example Reference: http://homepages.warwick.ac.uk/~masbb/HypGeomandCntdFractions-2.pdf

3) Penrose tilings (and possible connections to the dynamics of tiling): Example reference: https://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/ritter/masterclasses.html, Miles of Tiles by Charles Radin

5) Representation Theory and Voting Theory Example reference: https://arxiv.org/abs/1508.05891

This one is not exactly on that list but occurs elsewhere on the site

8) Differential Equations on Fractals: Example reference: Differential equations on fractals, R. Strichartz

10) General Secure Multi-party computation from any Linear Secret Sharing Scheme: Example reference: https://www.iacr.org/archive/eurocrypt2000/1807/18070321-new.pdf

I'm sorry for the slant towards some topics but there's a "tag" option on the webpage which allows you to see topics by area.

answered Sep 20, 2017 at 13:28 181 1 1 silver badge 4 4 bronze badges $\begingroup$

Almost any chapter of this wonderful book could serve as a seminar topic. Each chapter is pretty much self-contained.

Matoušek, Jiří. Thirty-three miniatures: Mathematical and Algorithmic applications of Linear Algebra. Vol. 53. American Mathematical Soc., 2010. (AMS link.)

answered Feb 1, 2017 at 15:26 Joseph O'Rourke Joseph O'Rourke 30.1k 6 6 gold badges 63 63 silver badges 143 143 bronze badges $\begingroup$

(1) I am shocked that no one has mentioned the so-called Monty Hall problem/paradox. :)

(2) The point that "probability" does not directly describe "randomness", e.g., although the sequence of heads-tails HHHHHHHHHH seems "unlikely/not-random", it has the same probability ($2^$) as "random-seeming" sequences such as HHTHTTTHHT.

(3) "The other quadratic formula" (this one is more shallow, but fun): if $ax^2+bx+c=0$, and $c\not=0$, then also $a+b(1/x)+c(1/x)^2=0$, and the quadratic formula for $1/x$, inverted, gives an unexpected formula for $x$ itself.

(4) Using linear algebra of 2x2 matrices to get the formula for the $n$th Fibonnaci number.

(5) Liouville's theorem (really just a corollary of the mean value theorem!) that an irrational real number that "can be approximated too well" by rationals must be transcendental.

answered Feb 1, 2017 at 23:23 paul garrett paul garrett 14.7k 2 2 gold badges 34 34 silver badges 72 72 bronze badges $\begingroup$

Here are three books I have used in various ways for such a course, focused on mathematics history.

Any book by Eli Maor is also definitely game. Again, supplementing for higher levels - but there is a surprising amount that they won't know! So much math, so little time.

answered Jan 30, 2017 at 23:30 5,996 21 21 silver badges 43 43 bronze badges $\begingroup$

How about a talk on the continuum hypothesis (CH) and related topics? It's a fascinating subject and can be tailored for basically any level depending on how detailed you get.

Full disclosure, I'm biased because I gave such a talk aimed at MS students and upper-level undergrads on this topic almost 9 years ago. And I think this meets all four of your criteria listed as of the time I write this, since they're very similar to what I was trying to do. Here's an outline of my presentation as best as I can remember it; feel free to draw from it as you wish:

This question in the last bullet point above is the perfect way to bring up the CH (since the question is basically, "Is the continuum hypothesis false?"). And what's interesting about the CH is the answer is independent of ZFC set theory, meaning we can take the answer to be "yes" or "no" and either way we won't get a contradiction in ZFC set theory. We know this from work done independently by Kurt Gödel and Paul Cohen.

I think there were some slightly related topics and/or generalities I discussed, such as cardinal numbers and transfiniteness, etc. It's been too long to say for sure.

This was my main reference:

Oh, and bonus points if you take it to the next level like I might have.

EDIT: Another idea for a talk is how linear algebra can be used to determine solvability of a lights out game. A good starting resource is this site on Wolfram MathWorld. I expanded on it in this post on Puzzling.SE. I'm sure the paper referenced in that Wiki article would also be a good resource.

answered Feb 4, 2017 at 19:19 user6648 user6648 $\begingroup$

Personally I would discuss Graph theory, in a diverse and conceptual way with a few deeper dives. Students of that level should be familiar of weighted graphs, have an intuition for the size of functions (which could be leveraged in a discussion of travelling salesman, big O notation, how quickly networks can grow, Ramsey Theory R(3,3), chromatic polynomials, etc). There is so much novelty in graph theory, and it draws many areas of maths together in novel ways.

At a minimum, I'd include Erdös Renyi Random Graph models, and the emergance of a large connected cluster. It is an accessible mention of asymptoic analysis, simple graph enumeration, and probability distributions(as the edges per node modelled via Poisson is appreciably different to edges as randomly selected pairs of nodes).

Depends on time and how quickly you move through content, but you could try to mention dynamical systems, such as predator-prey models, and how graph theory can be applied in the spread of diseases and informtion.

I think this topic is well suited, because it is an example of three important chracteristics of matha: Interconnected, Rich in application, and the sheer enormity of open problems. E.g. P=NP, Graph Homomorphism, Ramsey (5,5,), etc.

At 2nd year ans above, it is likely many already have heard of Monty Hall,C Cardinal Infinities, and Mandelbrot(although this could be included if you hedge your bet with a split between dynamical systems and graph theorg).