Seminar series
Date
Fri, 24 Feb 2023
16:00
Location
L1
Speaker
Dr Aleksander Horawa (North Wing); Dr Jemima Tabeart (South Wing)

Speaker: Dr Aleksander Horawa (North Wing)
Title: Bitcoin, elliptic curves, and this building


Abstract:
We will discuss two motivations to work on Algebraic Number Theory: applications to cryptography, and fame and fortune. For the first, we will explain how Bitcoin and other companies use Elliptic Curves to digitally sign messages. For the latter, we will introduce two famous problems in Number Theory: Fermat's Last Theorem, worth a name on this building, and the Birch Swinnerton--Dyer conjecture, worth $1,000,000 according to some people in this building (Clay Mathematics Institute).

 

Speaker: Dr Jemima Tabeart (South Wing)
Title: Numerical linear algebra for weather forecasting

Abstract:
The quality of a weather forecast is strongly determined by the accuracy of the initial condition. Data assimilation methods allow us to combine prior forecast information with new measurements in order to obtain the best estimate of the true initial condition. However, many of these approaches require the solution an enormous least-squares problem. In this talk I will discuss some mathematical and computational challenges associated with data assimilation for numerical weather prediction, and show how structure-exploiting numerical linear algebra approaches can lead to theoretical and computational improvements.

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