Forthcoming Seminars
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Mon, 08/11/2010 16:00 |
Frank Gounelas (Oxford) |
Junior Number Theory Seminar |
SR1 |
| In this talk I will introduce some of the basic ideas linking the theory of complex multiplication for elliptic curves and class field theory. Time permitting, I'll mention Shimura and Taniyama's work on the case of abelian varieties. | |||
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Mon, 08/11/2010 17:00 |
Konstantin Pileckas (Vilnius University) |
Partial Differential Equations Seminar |
Gibson 1st Floor SR | ||||
We study the nonhomogeneous boundary value problem for the
Navier–Stokes equations
with the boundary ,
consisting of disjoint components .
Starting from the famous J. Leray's paper published in 1933,
problem (1) was a subject of investigation in many papers. The
continuity equation in (1) implies the necessary solvability
condition
is a unit vector of the outward (with respect to
) normal to . However, for a long time
the existence of a weak solution to
problem (1) was proved only under the stronger condition
will be presented in the talk. It will be proved that
this problem has a solution, if the flux of the
boundary datum through is nonnegative (outflow
condition). |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 10:00 |
Matthew Bullimore (Oxford) |
Twistor Workshop |
Gibson 1st Floor SR |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 12:00 |
Paul Tod (Oxford) |
Relativity Seminar |
L3 |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 14:15 |
Dr Kuniko Yamazaki (AOPP University of Oxford) |
Geophysical and Nonlinear Fluid Dynamics Seminar |
Dobson Room, AOPP |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 14:30 |
David Ellis (Cambridge) |
Combinatorial Theory Seminar |
L3 |
| A family of graphs F on a fixed set of n vertices is said to be triangle-intersecting if for any two graphs G,H in F, the intersection of G and H contains a triangle. Simonovits and Sos conjectured that such a family has size at most (1/8)2^{\binom{n}{2}}, and that equality holds only if Fconsists of all graphs containing some fixed triangle. Recently, the author, Yuval Filmus and Ehud Friedgut proved a strengthening of this conjecture, namely that if F is an odd-cycle-intersecting family of graphs, then |F| \leq (1/8) 2^{\binom{n}{2}}. Equality holds only if F consists of all graphs containing some fixed triangle. A stability result also holds: an odd-cycle-intersecting family with size close to the maximum must be close to a family of the above form. We will outline proofs of these results, which use Fourier analysis, together with an analysis of the properties of random cuts in graphs, and some results in the theory of Boolean functions. We will then discuss some related open questions. All will be based on joint work with Yuval Filmus (University of Toronto) and Ehud Friedgut (Hebrew University of Jerusalem). | |||
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Tue, 09/11/2010 15:45 |
Amin Gholampour and Yunfeng Jiang (Imperial College London) |
Algebraic and Symplectic Geometry Seminar |
L3 |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 16:00 |
Dawid Kielak (Oxford University) |
Junior Geometric Group Theory Seminar |
DH 3rd floor SR |
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Tue, 09/11/2010 17:00 |
Olivier Dudas (Oxford) |
Algebra Seminar |
L2 |
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Wed, 10/11/2010 00:00 |
Prakash Panangaden (McGill and Oxford) |
Analytic Topology in Mathematics and Computer Science |
L3 |
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Wed, 10/11/2010 10:10 |
Janet Elliott (University of Alberta) |
OCCAM Wednesday Morning Event |
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28) |
| Cryopreservation (using temperatures down to that of liquid nitrogen at –196 °C) is the only way to preserve viability and function of mammalian cells for research and transplantation and is integral to the quickly evolving field of regenerative medicine. To cryopreserve tissues, cryoprotective agents (CPAs) must be loaded into the tissue. The loading is critical because of the high concentrations required and the toxicity of the CPAs. Our mathematical model of CPA transport in cartilage describes multi-component, multi-directional, non-dilute transport coupled to mechanics of elastic porous media in a shrinking and swelling domain. Parameters are obtained by fitting experimental data. We show that predictions agree with independent spatially and temporally resolved MRI experimental measurements. This research has contributed significantly to our interdisciplinary group’s ability to cryopreserve human articular cartilage. | |||
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Wed, 10/11/2010 11:30 |
Owen Cotton-Barratt (University of Oxford) |
Algebra Kinderseminar |
ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2 |
| We will investigate what one can detect about a discrete group from its profinite completion, with an emphasis on considering geometric properties. | |||
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Thu, 11/11/2010 11:00 |
Jamshid Derakhshan |
Advanced Class Logic |
SR2 |
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Abstract. In this talk, I will present joint work with Uri Onn, Mark Berman, and Pirita Paajanen. Let G be a linear algebraic group defined over the integers. Let O be a compact discrete valuation ring with a finite residue field of cardinality q and characteristic p. The group G(O) has a filtration by congruence subgroups G_m(O) (which is by definition the kernel of reduction map modulo P^m where P is the maximal ideal of O). Let c_m=c_m(G(O)) denote the number of conjugacy classes in the finite quotient group G(O)/G_m(O) (which is called the mth congruence quotient of G(O)). The conjugacy class zeta function of G(O) is defined to be the Dirichlet series Z_{G(O)}(s)=\sum_{m=0,1,...} c_m q^_{-ms}, where s is a complex number with Re(s)>0. This zeta function was defined by du Sautoy when G is a p-adic analytic group and O=Z_p, the ring of p-adic integers, and he proved that in this case it is a rational function in p^{-s}. We consider the question of dependence of this zeta function on p and more generally on the ring O. We prove that for certain algebraic groups, for all compact discrete valuation rings with finite residue field of cardinality q and sufficiently large residue characteristic p, the conjugacy class zeta function is a rational function in q^{-s} which depends only on q and not on the structure of the ring. Note that this applies also to positive characteristic local fields.
A key in the proof is a transfer principle. Let \psi(x) and f(x) be resp. definable sets and functions in Denef-Pas language. For a local field K, consider the local integral Z(K,s)=\int_\psi(K) |f(x)|^s dx, where | | is norm on K and dx normalized absolute value giving the integers O of K volume 1. Then there is some constant c=c(f,\psi) such that for all local fields K of residue characteristic larger than c and residue field of cardinality q, the integral Z(K,s) gives the same rational function in q^{-s} and takes the same value as a complex function of s.
This transfer principle is more general than the specialization to local fields of the special case when there is no additive characters of the motivic transfer principle of Cluckers and Loeser since their result is the case when the integral is zero.
The conjugacy class zeta function is related to the representation zeta function which counts number of irreducible complex representations in each degree (provided there are finitely many or finitely many natural classes) as was shown in the work of Lubotzky and Larsen, and gives information on analytic properties of latter zeta function. |
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Thu, 11/11/2010 11:00 |
Hannah Arnold (AOPP University of Oxford) |
Applied Dynamical Systems and Inverse Problems Seminar |
DH 3rd floor SR |
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Thu, 11/11/2010 13:00 |
Stephen Roberts |
Mathematical Finance Internal Seminar |
DH 1st floor SR |
| This talk highlights the role of Gaussian Process models in sequential data analysis. Issues of active data selection, global optimisation, sensor selection and prediction in the presence of changepoints are discussed. | |||
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Thu, 11/11/2010 13:00 |
Christopher Hopper (University of Oxford) |
Junior Geometry and Topology Seminar |
SR1 |
| The maximum principle is one of the main tools use to understand the behaviour of solutions to the Ricci flow. It is a very powerful tool that can be used to show that pointwise inequalities on the initial data of parabolic PDE are preserved by the evolution. A particular weak maximum principle for vector bundles will be discussed with references to Hamilton's seminal work [J. Differential Geom. 17 (1982), no. 2, 255–306; MR664497] on 3-manifolds with positive Ricci curvature and his follow up paper [J. Differential Geom. 24 (1986), no. 2, 153–179; MR0862046] that extends to 4-manifolds with various curvature assumptions. | |||
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Thu, 11/11/2010 14:00 |
Prof. Jean-Paul Berrut (Université de Fribourg) |
Computational Mathematics and Applications |
Gibson Grd floor SR |
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Efficient linear and infinitely smooth approximation of functions from equidistant samples is a fascinating problem, at least since Runge showed in 1901 that it is not delivered by the interpolating polynomial. In 1988, I suggested to substitute linear rational for polynomial interpolation by replacing the denominator 1 with a polynomial depending on the nodes, though not on the interpolated function. Unfortunately the so-obtained interpolant converges merely as the square of the mesh size. In 2007, Floater and Hormann have given for every integer a denominator that yields convergence of that prescribed order. In the present talk I shall present the corresponding interpolant as well as some of its applications to differentiation, integration and the solution of boundary value problems. This is joint work with Georges Klein and Michael Floater. |
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Thu, 11/11/2010 14:30 |
Raf Bocklandt (Newcastle) |
Representation Theory Seminar |
L3 |
| We describe a method to find all toric noncommutative crepant resolutions of a 3-dimensional toric singularity. We discuss how this method generalizes to higher dimensions and how we can construct analogons of dimer models. | |||
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Thu, 11/11/2010 16:00 |
Roger Heath-Brown (Oxford) |
Number Theory Seminar |
L3 |
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Thu, 11/11/2010 17:00 |
Professor Gui-Qiang G. Chen (Oxford) |
Differential Equations and Applications Seminar |
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| The Mathematical Institute invites you to attend the Inaugural Lecture of Professor Gui-Qiang G. Chen. Professor in the Analysis of Partial Differential Equations. Examination Schools, 75-81 High Street, Oxford, OX 4BG. There is no charge to attend but registration is required. Please register your attendance by sending an email to events@maths.ox.ac.uk specifying the number of people in your party. Admission will only be allowed with prior registration. ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————— ABSTRACT While calculus is a mathematical theory concerned with change, differential equations are the mathematician's foremost aid for describing change. In the simplest case, a process depends on one variable alone, for example time. More complex phenomena depend on several variables – perhaps time and, in addition, one, two or three space variables. Such processes require the use of partial differential equations. The behaviour of every material object in nature, with timescales ranging from picoseconds to millennia and length scales ranging from sub-atomic to astronomical, can be modelled by nonlinear partial differential equations or by equations with similar features. The roles of partial differential equations within mathematics and in the other sciences become increasingly significant. The mathematical theory of partial differential equations has a long history. In the recent decades, the subject has experienced a vigorous growth, and research is marching on at a brisk pace. In this lecture, Professor Gui-Qiang G. Chen will present several examples to illustrate the origins, developments, and roles of partial differential equations in our changing world. | |||

![\[
\left\{ \begin{array}{rcl}
-\nu \Delta{\bf u}+\big({\bf u}\cdot \nabla\big){\bf u} +\nabla p&=\qquad \hbox{\rm in }\;\;\Omega,\\[4pt]
{\rm div}\,{\bf u}&=&0 \qquad \hbox{\rm in }\;\;\Omega,\\[4pt]
{\bf u}&=\qquad \hbox{\rm on }\;\;\partial\Omega
\end{array}\right
\eqno(1)
\]](/files/tex/7d3ec7dc47c88cc0a07dd4eeafcd37d8951e8452.png)
with the boundary
,
consisting of
disjoint components
.
Starting from the famous J. Leray's paper published in 1933,
problem (1) was a subject of investigation in many papers. The
continuity equation in (1) implies the necessary solvability
condition

is a unit vector of the outward (with respect to
) normal to
to
problem (1) was proved only under the stronger condition

will be presented in the talk. It will be proved that
this problem has a solution, if the flux
of the
boundary datum through
is nonnegative (outflow
condition).