oRANS: Online optimisation of RANS machine learning models with embedded DNS data generation
Dehtyriov, D
MacArt, J
Sirignano, J
(03 Oct 2025)
Impact of memory on clustering in spontaneous particle aggregation
Erban, R
Haskovec, J
(17 Oct 2025)
Some Identities For Periods of Hulek-Verrill Threefolds
de la Ossa, X
Elmi, M
(20 Oct 2025)
On the Fourier Coefficients of critical Gaussian multiplicative chaos
Arguin, L
Hamdan, J
(28 Oct 2025)
Tue, 25 Nov 2025
15:00
15:00
L6
Non-Definability of Free Independence
William Boulanger, Emma Harvey, Yizhi Li
(Oxford University)
Abstract
Definability of a property, in the context of operator algebras, can be thought of as invariance under ultraproducts. William Boulanger, Emma Harvey, and Yizhi Li will show that free independence of elements, a concept from Voiculescu's free probability theory, does not lift from ultrapowers, and is thus not definable, either over C*-probability spaces or tracial von Neumann algebras. This fits into the general interest of lifting n-independent operators.
This talk comes from a summer research project supervised by J. Pi and J. Curda.
Wed, 19 Nov 2025
16:00 -
17:00
L6
QI groups and QI rigidity
Paula Heim
(Max Planck Institute in Leipzig)
Abstract
When studying a metric space, it can be interesting to
consider the group of maps preserving its large scale geometry. These
maps are called quasiisometries and the associated group is called the
QI group. Determining the QI group of a metric space is, in general, a
hard problem. Few QI groups are known explicitly, and most of these
results arise from a phenomenon called QI rigidity, which essentially
says that QI(X)=Isom(X). In this talk we will explore these concepts and
give a partial answer to the question which groups can arise as QI
groups of metric spaces. This talk is based on joint work with Joe
MacManus and Lawk Mineh.
consider the group of maps preserving its large scale geometry. These
maps are called quasiisometries and the associated group is called the
QI group. Determining the QI group of a metric space is, in general, a
hard problem. Few QI groups are known explicitly, and most of these
results arise from a phenomenon called QI rigidity, which essentially
says that QI(X)=Isom(X). In this talk we will explore these concepts and
give a partial answer to the question which groups can arise as QI
groups of metric spaces. This talk is based on joint work with Joe
MacManus and Lawk Mineh.
Inclusions of operator algebras from tensor categories: beyond irreducibility
Hataishi, L
Palomares, R
Glasgow Mathematical Journal
1-35
(03 Nov 2025)