The Australian Direction¹
A conference honoring² the mathematical contributions of Matt Emerton and Mark Kisin
(and a satellite of the 2026 International Congress of Mathematicians)
Dates: August 10-14, 2026
Location: University of Utah Department of Mathematics, Salt Lake City, UT
Organizing committee: Sean Howe, Brandon Levin, Keerthi Madapusi, Yunqing Tang
Speakers: Christophe Breuil†, Frank Calegari*, Ana Caraiani*, Pierre Colmez, Yiwen Ding, Hélène Esnault, Toby Gee, Mathilde Gerbelli-Gauthier, Daniel Le, Wiesława Nizioł, Lue Pan, George Pappas, Vytautas Pašku̅nas, Michael Rapoport, Ananth Shankar, Sug Woo Shin, Naomi Sweeting, Carl Wang-Erickson, Xinwen Zhu
*to be confirmed. †virtual.
Schedule:
We expect the conference to begin the morning of Monday, August 10th and to finish around noon on Friday, August 14th. There will be a free afternoon on the Wednesday and, in addition to the speakers listed above, we expect to hold two sessions of lightning talks and a poster session. Details TBA.
Registration and funding:
Participants must register in order to attend. We expect to open registration in January 2026, at which point you will find a link here.
Funding:
We hope to have some funding available for graduate student participants; however, we don't expect to have any details on this until late spring. This section will be updated with more information and, hopefully, a funding application once we know more.
Local logistics:
The event will take place in the University Utah Department of Mathematics, in the JWB and LCB buildings on Presidents Circle. Salt Lake City International Airport is a major international airport and a Delta hub and there is a lightrail that goes from the airport to campus with a single transfer; in addition to a large selection of domestic flights, there are direct flights to/from Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Seoul. For participants looking to extend their trip, there are 7 major national parks³ located within five hours driving distance of Salt Lake City as well as many closer natural attractions. In particular, the University of Utah is nestled against the Wasatch mountains, and the Wasatch front affords abundant recreation opportunities at cooler temperatures a short drive from campus by going up Millcreek Canyon, Little and Big Cottonwood Canyons, and American Fork Canyon; most of the canyons are also accessible via public transit.
Footnotes:
¹In the study of the cohomology of algebraic varieties, there are two different "directions" in play: the "German direction," where one considers the coefficients of the equations defining an algebraic variety as varying in a family, and the "Australian direction," where one considers the coefficients of the cohomology theory itself as varying in a family. This terminology was introduced by Laurent Fargues [F] (in his talk at the 2015 summer algebraic geometry institute in Salt Lake City!) in the context of moduli of p-divisible groups to compare and contrast the moduli problems studied by Kisin with those studied by Rapoport and Zink. A broader comparison of these two directions has been emphasized, among other places, in Scholze's 2018 ICM talk [S], and has since grown into a useful dichotomy for understanding the many recent advances in the field, including the fundamental contributions of Emerton and Kisin. In this conference, we interpret the term "Australian direction" more expansively as including all areas of mathematics where the mathematicians Emerton and Kisin have made significant contributions.
[F] - Laurent Fargues. From local class field to the curve and vice versa. In Algebraic geometry: Salt Lake City 2015, volume 97.2 of Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., pages 181-198. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 2018.
[S] - Peter Scholze. p-adic geometry. Proceedings of the ICM 2018.
²Matt and Mark, still spring chickens, are both turning 55 in 2026. But, together that makes 110! So, we're either a bit early or very late. And did you know that Benson Farb, perennial foil to Mark and Matt, even had a conference when he turned 50?
³Four of the national parks in Utah (Arches, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef, and Zion) can get quite hot in August, but Bryce Canyon is at a higher altitude and typically still nice. Grand Teton and Yellowstone in Idaho/Montana/Wyoming should be beautiful, though crowded. There are also many other nearby state parks and natural destinations that will be less crowded than national parks (we recommend, e.g., the Sawtooth mountains in Idaho).