The role of clearance in neurodegenerative diseases
Brennan, G Thompson, T Oliveri, H Rognes, M Goriely, A SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics S172-S198 (17 Jul 2023)

Today:
This afternoon Fridays@4 is in the Dept of Statistics for their Florence Nightingale Lecture:

Professor Marloes Matthuis (ETH Zurich) - Causal learning from observational data

Effective description of sub-maximal chaos: stringy effects for SYK
scrambling
Choi, C Haehl, F Mezei, M Sárosi, G (13 Jan 2023) http://arxiv.org/abs/2301.05698v2
Mon, 30 Jan 2023
16:00
L6

Collisions in supersingular isogeny graphs

Wissam Ghantous
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

In this talk we will study the graph structure of supersingular isogeny graphs. These graphs are known to have very few loops and multi-edges. We formalize this idea by studying and finding bounds for their number of loops and multi-edges. We also find conditions under which these graphs are simple. To do so, we introduce a method of counting the total number of collisions (which are special endomorphisms) based on a trace formula of Gross and a known formula of Kronecker, Gierster and Hurwitz. 

The method presented in this talk can be used to study many kinds of collisions in supersingular isogeny graphs. As an application, we will see how this method was used to estimate a certain number of collisions and then show that isogeny graphs do not satisfy a certain cryptographic property that was falsely believed (and proven!) to hold.

Genus two curves with full √3-level structure and Tate-Shafarevich groups
Bruin, N Flynn, E Shnidman, A Selecta Mathematica (19 May 2023)
Genus two curves with full \sqrt{3}-level structure and Tate-Shafarevich groups.
Bruin, N FLYNN, E Shnidman, A Selecta Mathematica
Genus two curves with full \sqrt{3}-level structure and Tate-Shafarevich groups.
FLYNN, E Bruin, N Shnidman, A Selecta Mathematica
Representations of fusion categories and their commutants
Henriques, A Penneys, D Selecta Mathematica (New Series) volume 29 (27 Apr 2023)
Mon, 20 Mar 2023
14:15
L3

The asymptotic geometry of the Hitchin moduli space

Laura Fredrickson
(University of Oregon)
Abstract

Hitchin's equations are a system of gauge theoretic equations on a Riemann surface that are of interest in many areas including representation theory, Teichmüller theory, and the geometric Langlands correspondence. The Hitchin moduli space carries a natural hyperkähler metric.  An intricate conjectural description of its asymptotic structure appears in the work of Gaiotto-Moore-Neitzke and there has been a lot of progress on this recently.  I will discuss some recent results using tools coming out of geometric analysis which are well-suited for verifying these extremely delicate conjectures. This strategy often stretches the limits of what can currently be done via geometric analysis, and simultaneously leads to new insights into these conjectures.

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