Thu, 19 Oct 2023

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Extrinsic flows on convex hypersurfaces of graph type.

Hyunsuk Kang
(Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology and University of Oxford)
Abstract

Extrinsic flows are evolution equations whose speeds are determined by the extrinsic curvature of submanifolds in ambient spaces.  Some of the well-known ones are mean curvature flow, Gauss curvature flow, and Lagrangian mean curvature flow.

We focus on the special case in which the speed of a flow is given by powers of mean curvature for smooth convex hypersurfaces of graph type, i.e., ones that can be represented as the graph of a function.  Convergence and long-time existence of such flow will be discussed. Furthermore, C^2 estimates which are independent of height of the graph will be derived to see that the boundary of the domain of the graph is also a smooth solution for the same flow as a submanifold with codimension two in the classical sense.  Some of the main ideas, notably a priori estimates via the maximum principle, come from the work of Huisken and Ecker on mean curvature evolution of entire graphs in 1989.  This is a joint work with Ki-ahm Lee and Taehun Lee.

Thu, 19 Oct 2023

12:00 - 13:00
L1

Does Maxwell’s hypothesis of air saturation near the surface of evaporating liquid hold at all spatial scales?

Eugene Benilov
(University of Limerick)
Abstract

The classical model of evaporation of liquids hinges on Maxwell’s assumption that the air near the liquid’s surface is saturated. It allows one to find the evaporative flux without considering the interface separating liquid and air. Maxwell’s hypothesis is based on an implicit assumption that the vapour-emission capacity of the interface exceeds the throughput of air (i.e., its ability to pass the vapour on to infinity). If indeed so, the air adjacent to the liquid would get quickly saturated, justifying Maxwell’s hypothesis.

 

In the present paper, the so-called diffuse-interface model is used to account for the interfacial physics and, thus, derive a generalised version of Maxwell’s boundary condition for the near-interface vapour density. It is then applied to a spherical drop floating in air. It turns out that the vapour-emission capacity of the interface exceeds the throughput of air only if the drop’s radius is rd 10μm, but for rd ≈ 2μm, the two are comparable. For rd 1μm, evaporation is interface-driven, and the resulting evaporation rate is noticeably smaller than that predicted by the classical model.

Thu, 19 Oct 2023

11:00 - 12:00
C6

New ideas in Arakelov intersection theory

Michał Szachniewicz
(Mathematical Insitute, Oxford)
Abstract

I will give an overview of new ideas showing up in arithmetic intersection theory based on some exciting talks that appeared at the very recent conference "Global invariants of arithmetic varieties". I will also outline connections to globally valued fields and some classical problems.

Wed, 18 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
L6

Fibring in manifolds and groups

Monika Kudlinska
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Algebraic fibring is the group-theoretic analogue of fibration over the circle for manifolds. Generalising the work of Agol on hyperbolic 3-manifolds, Kielak showed that many groups virtually fibre. In this talk we will discuss the geometry of groups which fibre, with some fun applications to Poincare duality groups - groups whose homology and cohomology invariants satisfy a Poincare-Lefschetz type duality, like those of manifolds - as well as to exotic subgroups of Gromov hyperbolic groups. No prior knowledge of these topics will be assumed.

Disclaimer: This talk will contain many manifolds.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
C3

Compactness and related properties for weighted composition operators on BMOA

David Norrbo
(Åbo Akademi University)
Abstract

A previously known function-theoretic characterisation of compactness for a weighted composition operator on BMOA is improved. Moreover, the same function-theoretic condition also characterises weak compactness and complete continuity. In order to close the circle of implications, the operator-theoretic property of fixing a copy of c0 comes in useful. 

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
L6

Limiting spectral distributions of random matrices arising in neural networks

Ouns El Harzli
Abstract

We study the distribution of eigenvalues of kernel random matrices where each element is the empirical covariance between the feature map evaluations of a random fully-connected neural network. We show that, under mild assumptions on the non-linear activation function, namely Lipschitz continuity and measurability, the limiting spectral distribution can be written as successive free multiplicative convolutions between the Marchenko-Pastur law and a nonrandom measure specific to the neural network. The latter has no known analytical expression but can be simulated empirically, separately from the random matrices of interest.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

15:30 - 16:30
Online

Critical core percolation on random graphs

Alice Contat
(Université Paris-Saclay)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

Motivated by the desire to construct large independent sets in random graphs, Karp and Sipser modified the usual greedy construction to yield an algorithm that outputs an independent set with a large cardinal called the Karp-Sipser core. When run on the Erdős-Rényi $G(n,c/n)$ random graph, this algorithm is optimal as long as $c < e$. We will present the proof of a physics conjecture of Bauer and Golinelli (2002) stating that at criticality, the size of the Karp-Sipser core is of order $n^{3/5}$. Along the way we shall highlight the similarities and differences with the usual greedy algorithm and the $k$-core algorithm.
Based on a joint work with Nicolas Curien and Thomas Budzinski.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023
15:00

Dehn functions of central products of nilpotent groups

Claudio Llosa Isenrich
(KIT)
Abstract

The Dehn function of a finitely presented group provides a quantitative measure for the difficulty of detecting if a word in its generators represents the trivial element of the group. By work of Gersten, Holt and Riley the Dehn function of a nilpotent group of class $c$ is bounded above by $n^{c+1}$. However, we are still far from determining the precise Dehn functions of all nilpotent groups. In this talk, I will explain recent results that allow us to determine the Dehn functions of large classes of nilpotent groups arising as central products. As a consequence, for every $k>2$, we obtain many pairs of finitely presented $k$-nilpotent groups with bilipschitz asymptotic cones, but with different Dehn functions. This shows that Dehn functions can distinguish between nilpotent groups with the same asymptotic cone, making them interesting in the context of the conjectural quasi-isometry classification of nilpotent groups.  This talk is based on joint works with García-Mejía, Pallier and Tessera.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Online

$k$-blocks and forbidden induced subgraphs

Maria Chudnovsky
(Princeton)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

A $k$-block in a graph is a set of $k$ vertices every two of which are joined by $k$ vertex disjoint paths. By a result of Weissauer, graphs with no $k$-blocks admit tree-decompositions with especially useful structure. While several constructions show that it is probably very difficult to characterize induced subgraph obstructions for bounded tree width, a lot can be said about graphs with no $k$-blocks. On the other hand, forbidding induced subgraphs places significant restrictions on the structure of a $k$-block in a graphs. We will discuss this phenomenon and its consequences in the study of tree-decompositions in classes of graphs defined by forbidden induced subgraphs.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023
14:00
L5

Microlocal sheaves and affine Springer fibers

Pablo Boixeda Alvarez
(Yale University)
Abstract

The resolutions of Slodowy slices e are symplectic varieties that contain the Springer fiber (G/B)e as a Lagrangian subvariety. In joint work with R. Bezrukavnikov, M. McBreen, and Z. Yun, we construct analogues of these spaces for homogeneous affine Springer fibers. We further understand the categories of microlocal sheaves in these symplectic spaces supported on the affine Springer fiber as some categories of coherent sheaves.

In this talk I will mostly focus on the case of the homogeneous element ts for s a regular semisimple element and will discuss some relations of these categories with the small quantum group providing a categorification of joint work with R.Bezrukavnikov, P. Shan and E. Vasserot.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023
13:00
L1

An exact solution to cosmological bootstrap using 6j symbols

Sourav Sarkar
(Uppsala)
Abstract

We shall consider a crossing equation of the Euclidean conformal group in terms of conformal partial waves and in particular, a position independent representation of this equation. We shall briefly discuss the relevance of this equation to the problem of cosmological bootstrap. Thereafter, we shall sketch the derivation of the Biedenharn-Eliiot identity (a pentagon identity) for the 6j symbols of the conformal group and show how this provides us with an exact solution to said crossing equation. For the conformal group (which is non-compact), this involves some careful bookkeeping of the spinning representations. Finally, we shall discuss some consistency checks on the result obtained, and some open questions. 

Mon, 16 Oct 2023

16:30 - 17:30
L3

Plateau's problem via the theory of phase transitions

Stephen Lynch
(Imperial College London )
Abstract

Plateau's problem asks whether every boundary curve in 3-space is spanned by an area minimizing surface. Various interpretations of this problem have been solved using eg. geometric measure theory. Froehlich and Struwe proposed a PDE approach, in which the desired surface is produced using smooth sections of a twisted line bundle over the complement of the boundary curve. The idea is to consider sections of this bundle which minimize an analogue of the Allen--Cahn functional (a classical model for phase transition phenomena) and show that these concentrate energy on a solution of Plateau's problem. After some background on the link between phase transition models and minimal surfaces, I will describe new work with Marco Guaraco in which we produce smooth solutions of Plateau's problem using this approach. 

Mon, 16 Oct 2023
16:00
C3

Avoiding Problems

Francesco Ballini
(University of Oxford )
Abstract

In 2019 Masser and Zannier proved that "most" abelian varieties over the algebraic numbers are not isogenous to the jacobian of any curve (where "most" refers to an ordering by some suitable height function). We will see how this result fits in the general Zilber-Pink Conjecture picture and we discuss some (rather concrete) analogous problems in a power of the modular curve Y(1).

Mon, 16 Oct 2023
15:30
L4

Algorithms for Seifert fibered spaces

Adele Jackson
(Oxford University)
Abstract

Given two mathematical objects, the most basic question is whether they are the same. We will discuss this question for triangulations of three-manifolds. In practice there is fast software to answer this question and theoretically the problem is known to be decidable. However, our understanding is limited and known theoretical algorithms could have extremely long run-times. I will describe a programme to show that the 3-manifold homeomorphism problem is in the complexity class NP, and discuss the important sub-case of Seifert fibered spaces. 

 

Mon, 16 Oct 2023
15:30
Lecture Theatre 3, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, OX2 6GG

Non-adversarial training of Neural SDEs with signature kernel scores

Dr Maud Lemercier
(Mathematical Institute (University of Oxford))
Further Information

Please join us from 1500-1530 for tea and coffee outside the lecture theatre before the talk.

Abstract

Neural SDEs are continuous-time generative models for sequential data. State-of-the-art performance for irregular time series generation has been previously obtained by training these models adversarially as GANs. However, as typical for GAN architectures, training is notoriously unstable, often suffers from mode collapse, and requires specialised techniques such as weight clipping and gradient penalty to mitigate these issues. In this talk, I will introduce a novel class of scoring rules on path space based on signature kernels and use them as an objective for training Neural SDEs non-adversarially. The strict properness of such kernel scores and the consistency of the corresponding estimators, provide existence and uniqueness guarantees for the minimiser. With this formulation, evaluating the generator-discriminator pair amounts to solving a system of linear path-dependent PDEs which allows for memory-efficient adjoint-based backpropagation. Moreover, because the proposed kernel scores are well-defined for paths with values in infinite-dimensional spaces of functions, this framework can be easily extended to generate spatiotemporal data. This procedure permits conditioning on a rich variety of market conditions and significantly outperforms alternative ways of training Neural SDEs on a variety of tasks including the simulation of rough volatility models, the conditional probabilistic forecasts of real-world forex pairs where the conditioning variable is an observed past trajectory, and the mesh-free generation of limit order book dynamics.

Mon, 16 Oct 2023
14:15
L4

Vertex algebras from divisors on Calabi-Yau threefolds

Dylan Butson
(Oxford)
Abstract

We construct vertex algebras associated to divisors $S$ in toric Calabi-Yau threefolds $Y$, satisfying conjectures of Gaiotto-Rapcak and Feigin-Gukov, and in particular such that the characters of these algebras are given by a local analogue of the Vafa-Witten partition function of the underlying reduced subvariety $S^{red}$. These results are part of a broader program to establish a dictionary between the enumerative geometry of coherent sheaves on surfaces and Calabi-Yau threefolds, and the representation theory of vertex algebras and affine Yangian-type quantum groups.

Mon, 16 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 6
Fri, 13 Oct 2023
16:00
L1

You and Your Supervisor

Abstract

How do you make the most of graduate supervisions?  Whether you are a first year graduate wanting to learn about how to manage meetings with your supervisor, or a later year DPhil student, postdoc or faculty member willing to share their experiences and give advice, please come along to this informal discussion led by DPhil students for the first Fridays@4 session of the term.  You can also continue the conversation and learn more about graduate student life at Oxford at Happy Hour afterwards.

Fri, 13 Oct 2023

15:00 - 16:00
L5

What do we want from invariants of multiparameter persistence modules?

Luis Scoccola
(Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford)
Further Information

Luis Scoccola is a post-doc in the Centre for Topological Data Analysis, Mathematical Institute. He is a mathematician and computer scientist working in computational topology and geometry, and applications to machine learning and data science.

Abstract

Various constructions relevant to practical problems such as clustering and graph classification give rise to multiparameter persistence modules (MPPM), that is, linear representations of non-totally ordered sets. Much of the mathematical interest in multiparameter persistence comes from the fact that there exists no tractable classification of MPPM up to isomorphism, meaning that there is a lot of room for devising invariants of MPPM that strike a good balance between discriminating power and complexity of their computation. However, there is no consensus on what type of information we want these invariants to provide us with, and, in particular, there seems to be no good notion of “global” or “high persistence” features of MPPM.

With the goal of substantiating these claims, as well as making them more precise, I will start with an overview of some of the known invariants of MPPM, including joint works with Bauer and Oudot. I will then describe recent work of Bjerkevik, which contains relevant open questions and which will help us make sense of the notion of global feature in multiparameter persistence.

 

Fri, 13 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Agent-based, vertex-based, and continuum modeling of cell behavior in biological patterns

Prof Alexandria Volkening
(Department of Mathematics Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering)
Abstract

Many natural and social phenomena involve individual agents coming together to create group dynamics, whether the agents are drivers in a traffic jam, cells in a developing tissue, or locusts in a swarm. Here I will focus on two examples of such emergent behavior in biology, specifically cell interactions during pattern formation in zebrafish skin and gametophyte development in ferns. Different modeling approaches provide complementary insights into these systems and face different challenges. For example, vertex-based models describe cell shape, while more efficient agent-based models treat cells as particles. Continuum models, which track the evolution of cell densities, are more amenable to analysis, but it is often difficult to relate their few parameters to specific cell interactions. In this talk, I will overview our models of cell behavior in biological patterns and discuss our ongoing work on quantitatively relating different types of models using topological data analysis and data-driven techniques.

Fri, 13 Oct 2023

12:00 - 13:00
Common Room

Junior Algebra Social

Abstract

We will kick off the start of the academic year and the Junior Algebra and Representation Theory seminar (JART) with a fun social event in the common room. Come catch up with your fellow students about what happened over the summer, meet the new students and play some board games. We'll go for lunch together afterwards.

Fri, 13 Oct 2023
12:00
L3

Modular bootstrap for compact Calabi-Yau threefolds

Sergey Alexandrov
(Université de Montpellier)
Abstract
BPS indices encoding entropy of supersymmetric black holes in compactifications of Type II string theory on compact Calabi-Yau threefolds coincide with generalized Donaldson-Thomas invariants whose computation represents an outstanding problem. I'll show how this problem can be solved for a set of one-parameter threefolds by combining a direct integration of topological string, modular properties of rank 0 DT invariants counting D4-D2-D0 BPS states, and wall-crossing relations between rank 1 and rank 0 DT invariants. In particular, one obtains explicit (mock) modular functions encoding infinite sets of D4-D2-D0 BPS indices and new boundary conditions for the holomorphic anomaly equation allowing to overcome the limitations of the direct integration method.
 
Thu, 12 Oct 2023
16:00
L5

Moments of families of quadratic L-functions over function fields via homotopy theory

Dan Petersen
(Stockholm University)
Abstract

This is a report of joint work with Bergström-Diaconu-Westerland and Miller-Patzt-Randal-Williams. Based on random matrix theory, Conrey-Farmer-Keating-Rubinstein-Snaith have conjectured precise asymptotics for moments of families of quadratic L-functions over number fields. There is an extremely similar function field analogue, worked out by Andrade-Keating. I will explain that one can relate this problem to understanding the homology of the braid group with symplectic coefficients. With Bergström-Diaconu-Westerland we compute the stable homology groups of the braid groups with these coefficients, together with their structure as Galois representations. We moreover show that the answer matches the number-theoretic predictions. With Miller-Patzt-Randal-Williams we prove an improved range for homological stability with these coefficients. Together, these results imply the conjectured asymptotics for all moments in the function field case, for all sufficiently large (but fixed) q.

Thu, 12 Oct 2023
16:00
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

Path Shadowing Monte-Carlo: a new approach to prediction

Rudy Morel
(Ecole Normale Superieure)
Abstract

A Path Shadowing Monte-Carlo method provides prediction of future paths given any generative model.

At a given date, it averages future quantities over generated price paths whose past history matches, or “shadows”, the actual (observed) history.

We test our approach using paths generated from a maximum entropy model of financial prices,

based on the recently introduced “Scattering Spectra” which are multi-scale analogues of the standard skewness and kurtosis.

This model promotes diversity of generated paths while reproducing the main statistical properties of financial prices, including stylized facts on volatility roughness.

Our method yields state-of-the-art predictions for future realized volatility. It also allows one to determine conditional option smiles for the S&P500.

These smiles depend only on the distribution of the price process, and are shown to outperform both the current version of the Path Dependent Volatility model and the option market itself.

Thu, 12 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 3

Hermitian preconditioning for a class of non-Hermitian linear systems

Nicole Spillane
(Ecole Polytechnique (CMAP))
Abstract

This work considers weighted and preconditioned GMRES. The objective is to provide a way of choosing the preconditioner and the inner product, also called weight, that ensure fast convergence. The main focus of the article is on Hermitian preconditioning (even for non-Hermitian problems).

It is indeed proposed to choose a Hermitian preconditioner H, and to apply GMRES in the inner product induced by H. If moreover, the problem matrix A is positive definite, then a new convergence bound is proved that depends only on how well H preconditions the Hermitian part of A, and on a measure of how non-Hermitian A is. In particular, if a scalable preconditioner is known for the Hermitian part of A, then the proposed method is also scalable. I will also illustrate this result numerically.

Thu, 12 Oct 2023

13:00 - 14:00
L1

Surprises in a classic boundary-layer problem

Steven Strogatz
(Cornell University)
Abstract

Over the years, I've often taught a first course in asymptotics and perturbation methods, even though I don't know much about the subject. In this talk, I'll discuss a textbook example of a singularly perturbed nonlinear boundary-value problem that has revealed delightful new surprises, every time I teach it. These include a pitchfork bifurcation in the number of solutions as one varies the small parameter, and transcendentally small terms in the solutions' initial conditions that can be calculated by elementary means.

Wed, 11 Oct 2023
16:00
L6

Reasons to be accessible

Joseph MacManus
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

If some structure, mathematical or otherwise, is giving you grief, then often the first thing to do is to attempt to break the offending object down into (finitely many) simpler pieces.

In group theory, when we speak of questions of *accessibility* we are referring to the ability to achieve precisely this. The idea of an 'accessible group' was first coined by Terry Wall in the 70s, and since then has left quite a mark on our field (and others). In this talk I will introduce the toolbox required to study accessibility, and walk you and your groups through some reasons to be accessible.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
L6

Solving spin systems — the Babylonian way

Nicola Kistler
(Goethe University Frankfurt)
Abstract
The replica method, together with Parisi symmetry breaking mechanism, is a powerful tool which allows to compute the limiting free energy of any mean field disordered system. Unfortunately, the tool is dramatically flawed from a mathematical point of view. I will discuss a truly elementary procedure which allows to rigorously implement two (out of three) steps of the procedure, and which allows to represent the free energy of virtually any model from statistical mechanics as a Gaussian mixture model. I will then conclude with some remarks on the ensuing “Babylonian formulas” in relation with : 
1) work by Dellacherie-Martinez-San Martin on M-matrices, potential theory and ultrametricity, the latter being the key yet unjustified assumption of the whole Parisi theory; 
2) work of Mezard-Virasoro suggesting that the onset of scales and the universal hierarchical self-organisation of random systems is intimately linked to hidden geometrical properties of large random matrices which satisfy rules reminiscent of the popular SUDOKU game.
Tue, 10 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Non-commutative graphs

Matthew Daws
(University of Lancaster)
Abstract

I will discuss various definitions of quantum or noncommutative graphs that have appeared in the literature, along with motivating examples.  One definition is due to Weaver, where examples arise from quantum channels and the study of quantum zero-error communication.  This definition works for any von Neumann algebra, and is "spatial": an operator system satisfying a certain operator bimodule condition.  Another definition, first due to Musto, Reutter, and Verdon, involves a generalisation of the concept of an adjacency matrix, coming from the study of (simple, undirected) graphs.  Here we study finite-dimensional C*-algebras with a given faithful state; examples are perhaps less obvious.  I will discuss generalisations of the latter framework when the state is not tracial, and discuss various notions of a "morphism" of the resulting objects

Tue, 10 Oct 2023
15:00
L1

Rank gradient in higher rank lattices

Mikołaj Frączyk
(Jagiellonian University Cracow)
Abstract

In a recent work with Sam Mellick and Amanda Wilkens, we proved that higher rank semisimple Lie groups satisfy a generalization of Gaboriau fixed price property (originally defined for countable groups) to the setting of locally compact second countable groups. As one of the corollaries, under mild conditions, we can prove that the rank (minimal number of generators) or the first mod-p Betti number of a higher rank lattice grow sublinearly in the covolume.  The proof relies on surprising geometric properties of Poisson-Voronoi tessellations in higher-rank symmetric spaces, which could be of independent interest. 

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
C6

The social dynamics of group interactions

Dr. Iacopo Iacopini
(Network Science Institute, Northeastern University London )
Further Information
Abstract

Complex networks have become the main paradigm for modeling the dynamics of interacting systems. However, networks are intrinsically limited to describing pairwise interactions, whereas real-world systems are often characterized by interactions involving groups of three or more units. In this talk, I will consider social systems as a natural testing ground for higher-order network approaches (hypergraphs and simplicial complexes). I will briefly introduce models of social contagion and norm evolution on hypergraphs to show how the inclusion of higher-order mechanisms can lead to the emergence of novel phenomena such as discontinuous transitions and critical mass effects. I will then present some recent results on the role that structural features play on the emergent dynamics, and introduce a measure of hyper-coreness to characterize the centrality of nodes and inform seeding strategies. Finally, I will delve into the microscopic dynamics of empirical higher-order structures. I will study the mechanisms governing their temporal dynamics both at the node and group level, characterizing how individuals navigate groups and how groups form and dismantle. I will conclude by proposing a dynamical hypergraph model that closely reproduces the empirical observations.
 

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

(CANCELLED) Percolation through isoperimetry

Michael Krivelevich
(Tel Aviv University)
Abstract

Let $G$ be a $d$-regular graph of growing degree on $n$ vertices, and form a random subgraph $G_p$ of $G$ by retaining edge of $G$ independently with probability $p=p(d)$. Which conditions on $G$ suffice to observe a phase transition at $p=1/d$, similar to that in the binomial random graph $G(n,p)$, or, say, in a random subgraph of the binary hypercube $Q^d$?

We argue that in the supercritical regime $p=(1+\epsilon)/d$, $\epsilon>0$ being a small constant, postulating that every vertex subset $S$ of $G$ of at most $n/2$ vertices has its edge boundary at least $C|S|$, for some large enough constant $C=C(\epsilon)>0$, suffices to guarantee the likely appearance of the giant component in $G_p$. Moreover, its asymptotic order is equal to that in the random graph $G(n,(1+\epsilon)/n)$, and all other components are typically much smaller.

We further give examples demonstrating the tightness of this result in several key senses.

A joint work with Sahar Diskin, Joshua Erde and Mihyun Kang.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

14:00 - 14:30
L4

A sparse hp-finite element method for the Helmholtz equation posed on disks, annuli and cylinders

Ioannis Papadopoulos
(Imperial)
Abstract

We introduce a sparse and very high order hp-finite element method for the weak form of the Helmholtz equation.  The domain may be a disk, an annulus, or a cylinder. The cells of the mesh are an innermost disk (omitted if the domain is an annulus) and concentric annuli.

We demonstrate the effectiveness of this method on PDEs with radial direction discontinuities in the coefficients and data. The discretization matrix is always symmetric and positive-definite in the positive-definite Helmholtz regime. Moreover, the Fourier modes decouple, reducing a two-dimensional PDE solve to a series of one-dimensional solves that may be computed in parallel, scaling with linear complexity. In the positive-definite case, we utilize the ADI method of Fortunato and Townsend to apply the method to a 3D cylinder with a quasi-optimal complexity solve.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L5

Residual finiteness growth functions of surface groups with respect to characteristic quotients

Mark Pengitore
(University of Virginia)
Abstract

Residual finiteness growth functions of groups have attracted much interest in recent years. These are functions that roughly measure the complexity of the finite quotients needed to separate particular group elements from the identity in terms of word length. In this talk, we study the growth rate of these functions adapted to finite characteristic quotients. One potential application of this result is towards linearity of the mapping class group.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023
13:00
L1

Generalized Symmetries in Argyres-Douglas Theories

Alessandro Mininno
(DESY)
Abstract
In this talk, I will discuss the dynamical consequences of having 1-form, 2-group and non-invertible symmetries in Argyres-Douglas (AD) theories.
I will first review how to construct (G,G') and D_p(G) theories from geometric engineering. Then, I will briefly introduce how 1-form symmetries are found in these AD theories, focusing on their dynamical consequences in the study of the Higgs branch for such theories.  Analogously, I will show how certain D_p(G) theories enjoy a 2-group structure due to a non-trivial extension between a discrete 1-form symmetry and a continuous 0-form symmetry, emphasizing the dynamical consequences that a 2-group structure entails, and the family of AD theories that have it. This analysis allowed us to "bootstrap" families of D_p(G) theories sharing the same properties. Finally, I discuss the presence of non-invertible symmetries in AD theories obtained by gauging the flavor symmetry of multiple D_p(SU(N)) theories. 

 

Tue, 10 Oct 2023
11:00
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

DPhil Presentations

DPhil Students
Abstract

As part of the internal seminar schedule for Stochastic Analysis for this coming term, DPhil students have been invited to present on their works to date. Student talks are 20 minutes, which includes question and answer time.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023
11:00
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

DPhil Presentations

Adrian Martini, Fang Rui Lim, Thomas Groves, Sarah-Jean Meyer
Abstract

As part of the internal seminar schedule for Stochastic Analysis for this coming term, DPhil students have been invited to present on their works to date. Student talks are 20 minutes, which includes question and answer time. 

Students presenting are:

Adrian Martini, supervisor Alison Ethridge

Fang Rui Lim, supervisor Rama Cont

Thomas Groves, supervisor Dmitry Beylaev

Sarah-Jean Meyer, supervisor Massimiliano Gubinelli

Mon, 09 Oct 2023

16:30 - 17:30
L5

Exponential mixing by random velocity fields

Rishabh Gvalani
(Max Planck Institute in Leipzig)
Abstract

We establish exponentially-fast mixing for passive scalars driven by two well-known examples of random divergence-free vector fields. The first one is the alternating shear flow model proposed by Pierrehumbert, in which case we set up a dynamics-based framework to construct such space-time smooth universal exponential mixers. The second example is the statistically stationary, homogeneous, isotropic Kraichnan model of fluid turbulence. In this case, the proof follows a new explicit identity for the evolution of negative Sobolev norms of the scalar. This is based on joint works with Alex Blumenthal (Georgia Tech) and Michele Coti Zelati (ICL), and Michele Coti Zelati and Theodore Drivas (Stony Brook), respectively.

Mon, 09 Oct 2023
16:00
C3

Primes in arithmetic progressions to smooth moduli

Julia Stadlmann
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

The twin prime conjecture asserts that there are infinitely many primes p for which p+2 is also prime. This conjecture appears far out of reach of current mathematical techniques. However, in 2013 Zhang achieved a breakthrough, showing that there exists some positive integer h for which p and p+h are both prime infinitely often. Equidistribution estimates for primes in arithmetic progressions to smooth moduli were a key ingredient of his work. In this talk, I will sketch what role these estimates play in proofs of bounded gaps between primes. I will also show how a refinement of the q-van der Corput method can be used to improve on equidistribution estimates of the Polymath project for primes in APs to smooth moduli.

Mon, 09 Oct 2023
15:30
L4

Distribution of minimal surfaces in compact hyperbolic 3-manifolds

Ilia Smilga
(Oxford University)
Abstract

In a classical work, Bowen and Margulis proved the equidistribution of
closed geodesics in any hyperbolic manifold. Together with Jeremy Kahn
and Vladimir Marković, we asked ourselves what happens in a
three-manifold if we replace curves by surfaces. The natural analog of a
closed geodesic is then a minimal surface, as totally geodesic surfaces
exist only very rarely. Nevertheless, it still makes sense (for various
reasons, in particular to ensure uniqueness of the minimal
representative) to restrict our attention to surfaces that are almost
totally geodesic.

The statistics of these surfaces then depend very strongly on how we
order them: by genus, or by area. If we focus on surfaces whose *area*
tends to infinity, we conjecture that they do indeed equidistribute; we
proved a partial result in this direction. If, however, we focus on
surfaces whose *genus* tends to infinity, the situation is completely
opposite: we proved that they then accumulate onto the totally geodesic
surfaces of the manifold (if there are any).

Mon, 09 Oct 2023
15:30
Lecture Theatre 3, Mathematical Institute, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Woodstock Road, OX2 6GG

Compact Brownian surfaces

Professor Grégory Miermont
(École Normale Supérieure de Lyon)
Further Information

Please join us from 1500-1530 for tea and coffee outside the lecture theatre before the talk.

Abstract

We describe the compact scaling limits of uniformly random quadrangulations with boundaries on a surface of arbitrary fixed genus. These limits, called Brownian surfaces, are homeomorphic to the surface of the given genus with or without boundaries depending on the scaling regime of the boundary perimeters of the quadrangulation. They are constructed by appropriate gluings of pieces derived from Brownian geometrical objects (the Brownian plane and half-plane). In this talk, I will review their definition and discuss possible alternative constructions. This is based on joint work with Jérémie Bettinelli.

Mon, 09 Oct 2023
14:15
L4

How homotopy theory helps to classify algebraic vector bundles

Mura Yakerson
(Oxford)
Abstract

Classically, topological vector bundles are classified by homotopy classes of maps into infinite Grassmannians. This allows us to study topological vector bundles using obstruction theory: we can detect whether a vector bundle has a trivial subbundle by means of cohomological invariants. In the context of algebraic geometry, one can ask whether algebraic vector bundles over smooth affine varieties can be classified in a similar way. Recent advances in motivic homotopy theory give a positive answer, at least over an algebraically closed base field. Moreover, the behaviour of vector bundles over general base fields has surprising connections with the theory of quadratic forms.

Mon, 09 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 6

Mathematics of transfer learning and transfer risk: from medical to financial data analysis

Prof. Xin Guo
(University of California Berkeley)
Abstract

Transfer learning is an emerging and popular paradigm for utilizing existing knowledge from  previous learning tasks to improve the performance of new ones. In this talk, we will first present transfer learning in the early diagnosis of eye diseases: diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity.  

We will discuss how this empirical  study leads to the mathematical analysis of the feasibility and transferability  issues in transfer learning. We show how a mathematical framework for the general procedure of transfer learning helps establish  the feasibility of transfer learning as well as  the analysis of the associated transfer risk, with applications to financial time series data.

Tue, 03 Oct 2023
17:00
Lecture Theatre 1

Around the World in 80 Games - Marcus du Sautoy

Marcus du Sautoy
(University of Oxford)
Further Information

Oxford Mathematics Public Lecture: Around the World in 80 Games - Marcus du Sautoy

Join Marcus as he takes us on a mathematical journey across the centuries and through countries, continents and cultures in search of the games we love to play.  Based on his new book, he looks at the way mathematics has always been deeply intertwined with games and investigates how games themselves can provide us with opportunities for mathematical insight into the world.

From backgammon to chess, Catan to Snakes and Ladders, games are not simply an enjoyable diversion. They are rather the height of human ingenuity. Ours is the species that loves playing games: not homo sapiens but homo ludens.  The lecture is suitable for everyone ‘from age 8 to 108.’  Come and join Marcus on his journey Around the World in 80 Games. You simply can’t lose…

Marcus du Sautoy is Charles Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science in Oxford and Professor of Mathematics.

Please email @email to register.

The lecture will be broadcast on the Oxford Mathematics YouTube Channel on 24th October at 5pm, and can be watched any time after.

The Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures are generously supported by XTX Markets.

Thu, 28 Sep 2023
17:30
Lecture Theatre 1

Patterns in Science and Art -  Liliane Lijn, Marcus du Sautoy and Fatos Ustek with Conrad Shawcross

 Liliane Lijn, Marcus du Sautoy and Fatos Ustek with Conrad Shawcross
Further Information

The search for and creation of patterns is intrinsic to both science and art. But so is the desire to understand how and why those patterns break down and to uncover the implications for the scientist and the artist.

Artist Liliane Lijn, curator Fatos Ustek and mathematician Marcus du Sautoy will share their experience and understanding of pattern and where it has taken them in their scientific and artistic careers. Conrad Shawcross will chair the discussion and provide his own unique perspective as represented by his 'Cascading Principles' Exhibition.

Liliane Lijn is an American-born artist who has exhibited at the Venice Biennale, and was recently short listed for her design for the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square. Marcus Sautoy is a mathematician and Professor for the Public Understanding of Science in Oxford. Fatos Ustek is curator of the 'Cascading Principles' exhibition and curator of the sculpture park at Frieze London. Conrad Shawcross is an artist specialising in mechanical sculptures based on philosophical and scientific ideas.

Please email @email to register.

Thu, 21 Sep 2023

11:00 - 12:00
L4

Efficient prediction, estimation and identifiability analysis with mechanistic mathematical models

Professor Matthew Simpson
(QUT)
Abstract

Interpreting data using mechanistic mathematical models provides a foundation for discovery and decision-making in all areas of science and engineering. Key steps in using mechanistic mathematical models to interpret data include: (i) identifiability analysis; (ii) parameter estimation; and (iii) model prediction. Here we present a systematic, computationally efficient likelihood-based workflow that addresses all three steps in a unified way. Recently developed methods for constructing profile-wise prediction intervals enable this workflow and provide the central linkage between different workflow components. These methods propagate profile-likelihood-based confidence sets for model parameters to predictions in a way that isolates how different parameter combinations affect model predictions. We show how to extend these profile-wise prediction intervals to two-dimensional interest parameters, and then combine profile-wise prediction confidence sets to give an overall prediction confidence set that approximates the full likelihood-based prediction confidence set well.  We apply our methods to a range of synthetic data and real-world ecological data describing re-growth of coral reefs on the Great Barrier Reef after some external disturbance, such as a tropical cyclone or coral bleaching event.
 

Wed, 13 Sep 2023
17:00
Lecture Theatre 1

Four Ways of Thinking: Statistical, Interactive, Chaotic and Complex - David Sumpter

David Sumpter
Further Information

Mathematics is about finding better ways of reasoning. But for many applied mathematicians, the primary mission is to shape their minds in a way that gets them closer to the truth. The calculations are secondary, the real question is: how can we better understand the world around us?

David will take us on a journey through applied mathematics from statistics all the way to complexity theory, lifting examples from his work with football clubs — signing the best players (statistical thinking) or organising an attack (complex thinking) - and from every day life —  bickering less with our partners (interactive thinking) and learning to let go (chaotic thinking). David reimagines applied mathematics as a set of tools for life, from big work decisions to how we treat our friends, family and work colleagues. No problem is too big or too small for a mathematical solution.

Professor David Sumpter is author of five books including Soccermatics (2016), Outnumbered (2018) and Four Ways of Thinking (2023). His research covers everything from the inner workings of fish schools and ant colonies, through social psychology and segregation in society, to machine learning and artificial intelligence. He has consulted for leading football clubs and national teams and has written for The Economist 1843, The Telegraph, The Guardian, Prospect and FourFourTwo magazine.

Please email @email to register.

The lecture will be broadcast on our YouTube Channel exactly three weeks later, 5pm, 4th October and any time after.

The Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures are generously supported by XTX Markets.

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