Wed, 12 Jun 2024

16:00 - 17:00
L6

The relation gap and relation lifting problems

Marco Linton
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

If \(F\) is a free group and \(F/N\) is a presentation of a group \(G\), there is a natural way to turn the abelianisation of \(N\) into a \(\mathbb ZG\)-module, known as the relation module of the presentation. The images of normal generators for \(N\) yield \(\mathbb ZG\)-module generators of the relation module, but 'lifting' \(\mathbb ZG\)-generators to normal generators cannot always be done by a result of Dunwoody. Nevertheless, it is an open problem, known as the relation gap problem, whether the relation module can have strictly fewer \(\mathbb ZG\)-module generators than \(N\) can have normal generators when \(G\) is finitely presented. In this talk I will survey what is known and what is not known about this problem and its variations and discuss some recent progress for groups with a cyclic relation module.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Metric invariants from curvature-like inequalities

Florent Baudier
Abstract

A central theme in the 40-year-old Ribe program is the quest for metric invariants that characterize local properties of Banach spaces. These invariants are usually closely related to the geometry of certain sequences of finite graphs (Hamming cubes, binary trees, diamond graphs...) and provide quantitative bounds on the bi-Lipschitz distortion of those graphs.

A more recent program, deeply influenced by the late Nigel Kalton, has a similar goal but for asymptotic properties instead. In this talk, we will motivate the (asymptotic) notions of infrasup umbel convexity (introduced in collaboration with Chris Gartland (UC San Diego)) and bicone convexity. These asymptotic notions are inspired by the profound work of Lee, Mendel, Naor, and Peres on the (local) notion of Markov convexity and of Eskenazis, Mendel, and Naor on the (local) notion of diamond convexity. 

All these metric invariants share the common feature of being derived from point-configuration inequalities which generalize curvature inequalities.

If time permits we will discuss the values of these invariants for Heisenberg groups.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024
15:00
L6

TBD

Motiejus Valiunas
Tue, 11 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
L4

Universality for transversal Hamilton cycles

Yani Pehova
(London School of Economics)
Abstract

An interesting twist on classical subgraph containment problems in graph theory is the following: given a graph $H$ and a collection $\{G_1, \dots , G_m\}$ of graphs on a common vertex set $[n]$, what conditions on $G_i$ guarantee a copy of $H$ using at most one edge from each $G_i$? Such a subgraph is called transversal, and the above problem is closely related to the study of temporal graphs in Network Theory. In 2020 Joos and Kim showed that if $\delta(G_i)\geq n/2$, the collection contains a transversal Hamilton cycle. We improve on their result by showing that it actually contains every transversal Hamilton cycle if $\delta(G_i)\geq (1/2+o(1))n$. That is, for every function $\chi:[n]\to[m]$, there is a Hamilton cycle whose $i$-th edge belongs to $G_{\chi(i)}$.

This is joint work with Candida Bowtell, Patrick Morris and Katherine Staden.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
L5

Decision problems in one-relation semigroups

Carl-Fredrik Nyberg Brodda
(KIAS)
Abstract

I will give an overview and introduction to the most important decision problems in combinatorial semigroup theory, including the word problem, and describe attempts to solve a problem that has been open since 1914: the word problem in one-relation semigroups. I will link it with some of my results from formal language theory, as well as recent joint work with I. Foniqi and R. D. Gray (East Anglia) on proving undecidability of certain harder problems, proved by way of passing via one-relator groups.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024
13:00
TBA

SUPERTRANSLATIONS, ANGULAR MOMENTUM, AND COVARIANCE IN 4D ASYMPTOTICALLY FLAT SPACE

Massimo Porrati
(NYU)
Abstract
I will present a supertranslation-invariant and Lorentz-covariant definition of angular momentum in asymptotically flat 4D spacetime. This definition uses only asymptotic metric data and reproduces the flux necessary to obtain known radiation reaction effects. The formula has an appealing physical interpretation, it extends to Lorentz boost charges and integrated fluxes, and agrees with other existing definitions in appropriate reference frames.


 

Tue, 11 Jun 2024
11:00
L5

Renormalised Amperean area for 2D Higgs-Yang-Mills Field

Dr Isao Sauzedde
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

The objective of the talk is to present elements of Euclidean Quantum Field Theory and of the Symanzik's polymer representation for a model which includes an interaction with a magnetic field. We will explain how the problem of constructing such an EQFT can be translated into the problem of renormalising the Amperean area of a planar Brownian motion, an object that we will introduce during the talk. No prerequisite knowledge of the topic is expected.

Based on http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/isao.sauzedde/square_field3_3.pdf 

Mon, 10 Jun 2024
16:00
L2

Duffin-Schaeffer meets Littlewood - a talk on metric Diophantine approximation

Manuel Hauke
(University of York)
Abstract

Khintchine's Theorem is one of the cornerstones in metric Diophantine approximation. The question of removing the monotonicity condition on the approximation function in Khintchine's Theorem led to the recently proved Duffin-Schaeffer conjecture. Gallagher showed an analogue of Khintchine's Theorem for multiplicative Diophantine approximation, again assuming monotonicity. In this talk, I will discuss my joint work with L. Frühwirth about a Duffin-Schaeffer version for Gallagher's Theorem. Furthermore, I will give a broader overview on various questions in metric Diophantine approximation and demonstrate the deep connection to both analytic and combinatorial number theory that is hidden inside the proof of these statements.

Mon, 10 Jun 2024
15:30
Lecture Room 3

Scaling limits for planar aggregation with subcritical fluctuations

Prof Amanda Turner
(University of Leeds)
Abstract

Planar random growth processes occur widely in the physical world. Examples include diffusion-limited aggregation (DLA) for mineral deposition and the Eden model for biological cell growth. One approach to mathematically modelling such processes is to represent the randomly growing clusters as compositions of conformal mappings. In 1998, Hastings and Levitov proposed one such family of models, which includes versions of the physical processes described above. An intriguing property of their model is a conjectured phase transition between models that converge to growing disks, and 'turbulent' non-disk like models. In this talk I will describe a natural generalisation of the Hastings-Levitov family in which the location of each successive particle is distributed according to the density of harmonic measure on the cluster boundary, raised to some power. In recent joint work with Norris and Silvestri, we show that when this power lies within a particular range, the macroscopic shape of the cluster converges to a disk, but that as the power approaches the edge of this range the fluctuations approach a critical point, which is a limit of stability. This phase transition in fluctuations can be interpreted as the beginnings of a macroscopic phase transition from disks to non-disks analogous to that present in the Hastings-Levitov family.

Mon, 10 Jun 2024
15:30
L5

Symmetries of the free-factor complex and commensurator rigidity for Aut(F)

Martin Bridson
((Oxford University))
Abstract

 A commensuration of a group G is an isomorphism between finite-index subgroups of G. Equivalence classes of such maps form a group, whose importance first emerged in the work of Margulis on the rigidity and arithmeticity of lattices in semisimple Lie groups. Drawing motivation from this classical setting and from the study of mapping class groups of surfaces, I shall explain why, when N is at least 3, the group of automorphisms of the free group of rank N is its own abstract commensurator. Similar results hold for certain subgroups of Aut(F_N). These results are the outcome of a long-running project with Ric Wade. An important element in the proof is a non-abelian analogue of the Fundamental Theorem of Projective Geometry in which projective subspaces are replaced by the free factors of a free group; this is the content of a long-running project with Mladen Bestvina.
 

Mon, 10 Jun 2024
14:15
L4

Verlinde formulas on surfaces

Lothar Gottsche
(ICTP Trieste)
Abstract

Let $S$ be a smooth projective surface with $p_g>0$ and $H^1(S,{\mathbb Z})=0$. 
We consider the moduli spaces $M=M_S^H(r,c_1,c_2)$ of $H$-semistable sheaves on $S$ of rank $r$ and 
with Chern classes $c_1,c_2$. Associated a suitable class $v$ the Grothendieck group of vector bundles
on $S$ there is a deteminant line bundle $\lambda(v)\in Pic(M)$, and also a tautological sheaf $\tau(v)$ on $M$.

In this talk we derive a conjectural generating function for the virtual Verlinde numbers, i.e. the virtual holomorphic 
Euler characteristics of all determinant bundles $\lambda(v)$ on M, and for Segre invariants associated to $\tau(v)$ . 
The argument is based on conjectural blowup formulas and a virtual version of Le Potier's strange duality. 
Time permitting we also sketch a common refinement of these two conjectures, and their proof for Hilbert schemes of points.
 

Mon, 10 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 3

Randomly pivoted Cholesky

Prof. Joel Tropp
(California Institute of Technology, USA)
Abstract
André-Louis Cholesky entered École Polytechnique as a student in 1895. Before 1910, during his work as a surveyer for the French army, Cholesky invented a technique for solving positive-definite systems of linear equations. Cholesky's method can also be used to approximate a positive-semidefinite (psd) matrix using a small number of columns, called "pivots". A longstanding question is how to choose the pivot columns to achieve the best possible approximation.

This talk describes a simple but powerful randomized procedure for adaptively picking the pivot columns. This algorithm, randomly pivoted Cholesky (RPC), provably achieves near-optimal approximation guarantees. Moreover, in experiments, RPC matches or improves on the performance of alternative algorithms for low-rank psd approximation.

Cholesky died in 1918 from wounds suffered in battle. In 1924, Cholesky's colleague, Commandant Benoit, published his manuscript. One century later, a modern adaptation of Cholesky's method still yields state-of-the-art performance for problems in scientific machine learning.
 
Joint work with Yifan Chen, Ethan Epperly, and Rob Webber. Available at arXiv:2207.06503.


 

Fri, 07 Jun 2024

16:00 - 17:00
L1

Fluid flow and elastic flexure – mathematical modelling of the transient response of ice sheets in a changing climate CANCELLED

Prof Jerome Neufeld
(University of Cambridge)
Further Information

Jerome A. Neufeld

Professor of Earth and Planetary Fluid Dynamics
Centre for Environmental and Industrial Flows
Department of Earth Sciences
Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics
University of Cambridge
 

Research interests: The research in the Earth and Planetary Fluid Dynamics group focuses on using mathematical models and laboratory experiments to understand the fluid behaviour of the Earth and other planetary bodies. Current research interests include the consequences of subglacial hydrology on supraglacial lake drainage and the tidal modulation of ice streams, the solidification of magma oceans and the early generation of magnetic fields on planetary bodies, the erosive dynamics of idealised river systems, the emplacement and solidification of magmatic flows, viscous tectonic mountain building, and the general fluid dynamics of geological carbon storage.

Abstract

The response of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to a changing climate is one of the largest sources of uncertainty in future sea level predictions.  The behaviour of the subglacial environment, where ice meets hard rock or soft sediment, is a key determinant in the flux of ice towards the ocean, and hence the loss of ice over time.  Predicting how ice sheets respond on a range of timescales brings together mathematical models of the elastic and viscous response of the ice, subglacial sediment and water and is a rich playground where the simplified models of the contact between ice, rock and ocean can shed light on very large scale questions.  In this talk we’ll see how these simplified models can make sense of a variety of field and laboratory data in order to understand the dynamical phenomena controlling the transient response of large ice sheets.

 

Fri, 07 Jun 2024
16:00
L1

Departmental Colloquium: Fluid flow and elastic flexure – mathematical modelling of the transient response of ice sheets in a changing climate (Jerome Neufield) CANCELLED

Jerome Neufield
(Cambridge)
Abstract

CANCELLED DUE TO ILLNESS

The response of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to a changing climate is one of the largest sources of uncertainty in future sea level predictions.  The behaviour of the subglacial environment, where ice meets hard rock or soft sediment, is a key determinant in the flux of ice towards the ocean, and hence the loss of ice over time.  Predicting how ice sheets respond on a range of timescales brings together mathematical models of the elastic and viscous response of the ice, subglacial sediment and water and is a rich playground where the simplified models of the contact between ice, rock and ocean can shed light on very large scale questions.  In this talk we’ll see how these simplified models can make sense of a variety of field and laboratory data in order to understand the dynamical phenomena controlling the transient response of large ice sheets.

Fri, 07 Jun 2024

15:00 - 16:00
L5

Morse Theory for Group Presentations and Applications

Ximena Fernandez
(Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford)
Abstract

Discrete Morse theory serves as a combinatorial tool for simplifying the structure of a given (regular) CW-complex up to homotopy equivalence, in terms of the critical cells of discrete Morse functions. In this talk, I will introduce a refinement of this theory that not only ensures homotopy equivalence with the simplified CW-complex but also guarantees a Whitehead simple homotopy equivalence. Furthermore, it offers an explicit description of the construction of the simplified Morse complex and provides bounds on the dimension of the complexes involved in the Whitehead deformation.
This refined approach establishes a suitable theoretical framework for addressing various problems in combinatorial group theory and topological data analysis. I will show applications of this technique to the Andrews-Curtis conjecture and computational methods for inferring the fundamental group of point clouds.

This talk is based on the article: Fernandez, X. Morse theory for group presentations. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (2024), 2495-2523.

Fri, 07 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Modeling the electromechanics of aerial electroreception

Dr Isaac Vikram Chenchiah
(School of Mathematics University of Bristol)
Abstract
Aerial electroreception is the ability of some arthropods (e.g., bees) to detect electric fields in the environment. I present an overview of our attempts to model the electromechanics of this recently discovered phenomenon and how it might contribute to the sensory biology of arthropods. This is joint work with Daniel Robert and Ryan Palmer.


 

Fri, 07 Jun 2024

12:00 - 13:00
Quillen Room

Hyperbolic intersection arrangements

Samuel Lewis
(University of Glasgow)
Abstract

Choose your favourite connected graph $\Delta$ and shade a subset $J$ of its vertices. The intersection arrangement associated to the data $(\Delta, J)$ is a collection of real hyperplanes in dimension $|Jc|$, first defined by Iyama and Wemyss. This construction involves taking the classical Coxeter arrangement coming from $\Delta$ and then setting all variables indexed by $J$ to be zero. It turns out that for many choices of $J$ the chambers of the intersection arrangement admit a nice combinatorial description, along with a wall crossing rule to pass between them. I will start by making all this precise before discussing my work to classify tilings of the hyperbolic plane arising as intersection arrangements. This has applications to local notions of stability conditions using the tilting theory of contracted preprojective algebras.

Fri, 07 Jun 2024

12:00 - 13:15
L3

Symmetry, topology and entanglement in the chiral clock family

Nick Jones
(St John's College)
Abstract

Global symmetries greatly enrich the phase diagram of quantum many-body systems. As well as symmetry-breaking phases, symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phases have symmetric ground states that cannot be connected to a trivial state without a phase transition. There can also be symmetry-enriched critical points between these phases of matter. I will demonstrate these phenomena in phase diagrams constructed using the N-state chiral clock family of spin chains.  [Based on joint work with Paul Fendley and Abhishodh Prakash.]

Thu, 06 Jun 2024
18:00
33 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, E14 5LB

Frontiers in Quantitative Finance: Professor Steve Heston: Model-free Hedging of Option Variance and Skewness

Professor Steven Heston
(University of Maryland)
Further Information

Please register via our TicketSource page.

Abstract

Frontiers in Quantitative Finance is brought to you by the Oxford Mathematical and Computational Finance Group and sponsored by CitiGroup and Mosaic SmartData.

Abstract
This paper parsimoniously generalizes the VIX variance index by constructing model-free factor portfolios that replicate skewness and higher moments. It then develops an infinite series to replicate option payoffs in terms of the stock, bond, and factor returns. The truncated series offers new formulas that generalize the Black-Scholes formula to hedge variance and skewness risk.


About the speaker
Steve Heston is Professor of Finance at the University of Maryland. He is known for his pioneering work on the pricing of options with stochastic volatility.
Steve graduated with a double major in Mathematics and Economics from the University of Maryland, College Park in 1983, an MBA in 1985 followed by a PhD in Finance in 1990. He has held previous faculty positions at Yale, Columbia, Washington University, and the University of Auckland in New Zealand and worked in the private sector with Goldman Sachs in Fixed Income Arbitrage and in Asset Management Quantitative Equities.

Thu, 06 Jun 2024

17:00 - 18:00
L3

Model theory of limits

Leo Gitin
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Does the limit construction for inverse systems of first-order structures preserve elementary equivalence? I will give sufficient conditions for when this is the case. Using Karp's theorem, we explain the connection between a syntactic and formal-semantic approach to inverse limits of structures. We use this to give a simple proof of van den Dries' AKE theorem (in ZFC), a general AKE theorem for mixed characteristic henselian valued fields with no assumptions on ramification. We also recall a seemingly forgotten result of Feferman, that can be interpreted as a "saturated" AKE theorem in positive characteristic: given two elementarily equivalent $\aleph_1$-saturated fields $k$ and $k'$, the formal power series rings $k[[t]]$ and $k'[[t]]$ are elementarily equivalent as well. We thus hope to popularise some ideas from categorical logic.

Thu, 06 Jun 2024
16:30
C2

The invariant subspace problem

Per Enflo
Abstract
I will present a method to construct invariant subspaces - non-cyclic vectors - for a general operator on Hilbert space. It represents a new direction of a method of "extremal vectors", first presented in Ansari-Enflo [1]. One looks for an analytic function l(T) of T, of minimal norm, which moves a vector y near to a given vector x. The construction produces for most operators T a non-cyclic vector, by gradual approximation by almost non-cyclic vectors. But for certain weighted shifts, almost non-cyclic vectors will not always converge to a non-cyclic vector. The construction recognizes this, and when the construction does not work, it will show, that T has some shift-like properties.

 

Reference:
1. S. Ansari, P. Enflo, "Extremal vectors and invariant subspaces", Transactions of Am. Math. Soc. Vol. 350 no.2, 1998, pp.539–558
Thu, 06 Jun 2024
16:00
L5

Intersections of geodesics on modular curves and Hilbert modular forms

Håvard Damm-Johnsen
( Oxford)
Abstract

The 12th of Hilbert's 23 problems posed in 1900 asks for an explicit description of abelian extensions of a given base field. Over the rationals, this is given by the exponential function, and over imaginary quadratic fields, by meromorphic functions on the complex upper half plane.  Darmon and Vonk's theory of rigid meromorphic cocycles, or "RM theory", includes conjectures giving a $p$-adic solution over real quadratic fields. These turn out to be closely linked to purely topological questions about intersections of geodesics in the upper half plane, and to $p$-adic deformations of Hilbert modular forms. I will explain an extension of results of Darmon, Pozzi and Vonk proving some of these conjectures, and some ongoing work concerning analogous results on Shimura curves.

Thu, 06 Jun 2024
14:00
C4

Black Hole Microstate Counting: AdS

Tabea Sieper
Abstract

Junior Strings is a seminar series where DPhil students present topics of common interest that do not necessarily overlap with their own research area. This is primarily aimed at PhD students and post-docs but everyone is welcome.

Thu, 06 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 3

Structure-preserving hybrid finite element methods

Ari Stern
(Washington University in St. Louis, USA)
Abstract

The classical finite element method uses piecewise-polynomial function spaces satisfying continuity and boundary conditions. Hybrid finite element methods, by contrast, drop these continuity and boundary conditions from the function spaces and instead enforce them weakly using Lagrange multipliers. The hybrid approach has several numerical and implementational advantages, which have been studied over the last few decades.

 

In this talk, we show how the hybrid perspective has yielded new insights—and new methods—in structure-preserving numerical PDEs. These include multisymplectic methods for Hamiltonian PDEs, charge-conserving methods for the Maxwell and Yang-Mills equations, and hybrid methods in finite element exterior calculus.

Thu, 06 Jun 2024
12:00
L5

Volume above distance below

Raquel Perales
(CIMAT)
Abstract

Given a pair of metric tensors gj ≥ g0 on a Riemannian manifold, M, it is well known that Volj(M)≥Vol0(M). Furthermore, the volumes are equal if and only if the metric tensors are the same, gj=g0. Here we prove that if for a sequence gj, we have gj≥g0, Volj(M)→Vol0(M) and diam(Mj) ≤ D then (M,gj) converges to (M,g0) in the volume preserving intrinsic flat sense. The previous result will then be applied to prove stability of a class of tori.
 

This talk is based on joint works of myself with: Allen and Sormani (https://arxiv.org/abs/2003.01172), and Cabrera Pacheco and Ketterer (https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.03458).