The UCF Mathematics Colloquium, held every Monday from 3:30pm to 4:30pm in MSB 318, offers a diverse platform for research scholars, faculty, students, and industry experts to share and exchange ideas, fostering discussion and networking across various areas of mathematics.
Dr. Sarah Arpin, from Virginia Tech, will speak at this week's colloquium on supersingular elliptic curve isogeny graphs.
Abstract: Underlying the security of isogeny-based cryptography are supersingular elliptic curve isogeny graphs. These expansive, well-mixing graphs encode rich geometric information about supersingular elliptic curves over finite fields. In this talk, we take an arithmetic-geometric perspective to explore various graph variants. Along the way, we will uncover how supersingular elliptic curves and their isogeny graphs naturally lend themselves to cryptographic applications.
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