11:00
11:00
Aperiodic tilings and Groups
Abstract
It is an open question whether a group with a finite classifying space is hyperbolic or contains a Baumslag Solitar Subgroup. An idea of Gromov was to use aperiodic tilings of the plane to try and disprove this conjecture. I will be looking at some of the attempts to find a counterexample.
11:30
The Solovay-Kitaev Algorithm
Abstract
I shall outline a procedure for efficiently approximating arbitrary elements of certain topological groups by words in a finite set. The method is suprisingly general and is based upon the assumption that close to the identity, group elements may be easily expressible as commutators. Time permitting, I shall discuss some applications to uniform diameter bounds for finite groups and to quantum computation.
Noncommutative deformations and birational geometry II
Abstract
I will speak about recent work with Michael Wemyss (arXiv:1309.0698), applying noncommutative deformation theory to study the birational geometry of 3-folds. In particular, I will explain how every flippable or floppable rational curve in a 3-fold has a naturally associated algebra of noncommutative deformations, even in the singular setting. We investigate the properties of this algebra, and indicate how to calculate it in examples using quiver techniques. This gives new information about the (commutative) geometry of 3-folds, and in particular provides a new tool to differentiate between flops.
As a further application, we show how the noncommutative deformation algebra controls the homological properties of a floppable curve. In this setting, work of Bridgeland and Chen yields a Fourier-Mukai flop-flop functor which acts on the derived category of the 3-fold (assuming any singularities are at worst Gorenstein terminal). We show that this functor can be described as a spherical twist about the universal family over the noncommutative deformation algebra.
In the second part, I will talk about further work in progress, and explain some more technical details, such as the use of noncommutative deformation functors, and the categorical mutations of Iyama and Wemyss. If there is time, I will also give some higher-dimensional examples, and discuss situations involving chains of intersecting floppable curves. In this latter case, deformations, intersections and homological properties are encoded by the path algebra of a quiver, generalizing the algebra of noncommutative deformations.
A multilevel preconditioner for the biharmonic equation
Abstract
We present a multilevel preconditioner for the mixed finite element discretization of the biharmonic equation of first kind. While for the interior degrees of freedom a standard multigrid methods can be applied, a different approach is required on the boundary. The construction of the preconditioner is based on a BPX type multilevel representation in fractional Sobolev spaces. Numerical examples illustrate the obtained theoretical results.
Containers for independent sets
Abstract
An independent set in an $r$-uniform hypergraph is a subset of the vertices
that contains no edges. A container for the independent set is a superset
of it. It turns out to be desirable for many applications to find a small
collection of containers, none of which is large, but which between them
contain every independent set. ("Large" and "small" have reasonable
meanings which will be explained.)
Applications include giving bounds on the list chromatic number of
hypergraphs (including improving known bounds for graphs), counting the
solutions to equations in Abelian groups, counting Sidon sets,
establishing extremal properties of random graphs, etc.
The work is joint with David Saxton.
14:15
Contrasting short and long timescale variability of the North Atlantic Oscillation
Hybrid numerical-asymptotic methods for wave scattering problems
Abstract
Linear wave scattering problems (e.g. for acoustic, electromagnetic and elastic waves) are ubiquitous in science and engineering applications. However, conventional numerical methods for such problems (e.g. FEM or BEM with piecewise polynomial basis functions) are prohibitively expensive when the wavelength of scattered wave is small compared to typical lengthscales of the scatterer (the so-called "high frequency" regime). This is because the solution possesses rapid oscillations which are expensive to capture using conventional approximation spaces. In this talk I will outline some of my recent work in the development of "hybrid numerical-asymptotic" methods, which incur significantly reduced computational cost. These methods use approximation spaces containing oscillatory basis functions, carefully chosen to capture the high frequency asymptotic behaviour. In particular I will discuss some of the interesting challenges arising from non convex, penetrable and three-dimensional scatterers.
Noncommutative deformations and birational geometry I
Abstract
I will speak about recent work with Michael Wemyss (arXiv:1309.0698), applying noncommutative deformation theory to study the birational geometry of 3-folds. In particular, I will explain how every flippable or floppable rational curve in a 3-fold has a naturally associated algebra of noncommutative deformations, even in the singular setting. We investigate the properties of this algebra, and indicate how to calculate it in examples using quiver techniques. This gives new information about the (commutative) geometry of 3-folds, and in particular provides a new tool to differentiate between flops.
As a further application, we show how the noncommutative deformation algebra controls the homological properties of a floppable curve. In this setting, work of Bridgeland and Chen yields a Fourier-Mukai flop-flop functor which acts on the derived category of the 3-fold (assuming any singularities are at worst Gorenstein terminal). We show that this functor can be described as a spherical twist about the universal family over the noncommutative deformation algebra.
In the second part, I will talk about further work in progress, and explain some more technical details, such as the use of noncommutative deformation functors, and the categorical mutations of Iyama and Wemyss. If there is time, I will also give some higher-dimensional examples, and discuss situations involving chains of intersecting floppable curves. In this latter case, deformations, intersections and homological properties are encoded by the path algebra of a quiver, generalizing the algebra of noncommutative deformations.
00:00
Krull dimension of affinoid enveloping algebras.
Abstract
Affinoid enveloping algebras arise as certain p-adic completions of ordinary enveloping algebras, and are closely related to Iwasawa algebras. I will explain how to use Beilinson-Bernstein localisation to compute their (non-commutative) Krull dimension. This is recent joint work with Ian Grojnowski.
Calculations with elliptic curves
Abstract
We will discuss some geometric methods to study Diophantine equations. We focus on the case of elliptic curves and their natural generalisations: Abelian varieties, Calabi-Yau manifolds and hyperelliptic curves.
"Pathwise optimal transport bounds between a one-dimensional diffusion and its Euler scheme"
Abstract
(joint work with Aurélien Alfonsi and Arturo Kohatsu-Higa)
We are interested in the Wasserstein distance on the space of continuous sample-paths equipped with the supremum norm between the laws of a uniformly elliptic one-dimensional diffusion process and its continuous-time Euler scheme with N steps. This distance controls the discretization biais for a large class of path-dependent payoffs.
Its convergence rate to 0 is clearly intermediate between -the rate -1/2 of the strong error estimation obtained when coupling the stochastic differential equation and its Euler scheme with the same Brownian motion -and the rate -1 of the weak error estimation obtained when comparing the expectations of the same function of the diffusion and its Euler scheme at the terminal time.
For uniformly elliptic one-dimensional stochastic differential equations, we prove that this rate is not worse than -2/3.
Stuck Walks: a conjecture of Erschler, Tóth and Werner
Abstract
Abstract: In 2010, Erschler, Tóth and Werner introduced the so-called Stuck Walks, which are a class of self-interacting random walks on Z for which there is competition between repulsion at small scale and attraction at large scale. They proved that, for any positive integer L, if the relevant parameter belongs to a certain interval, then such random walks localize on L + 2 sites with positive probability. They also conjectured that it is the almost sure behaviour. We settle this conjecture partially, proving that the walk localizes on L + 2 or L + 3 sites almost surely, under the same assumptions.
Higher-Spin Correlators
Abstract
12:00
Large-N QCD as a Topological Field Theory on twistor space
Abstract
According to Witten a gauge theory with a mass gap contains a possibly trivial Topological Field Theory (TFT) in the infrared. We show that in SU(N) YM it there exists a trivial TFT defined by twistor Wilson loops whose v.e.v. is 1 in the large-N limit for any shape of the loops supported on certain Lagrangian submanifolds of space-time that lift to Lagrangian submanifolds of twistor space.
We derive a new version of the Makeenko-Migdal loop equation for the topological twistor Wilson loops, the holomorphic loop equation, that involves the change of variables in the YM functional integral from the connection to the anti-selfdual part of the curvature and the choice of a holomorphic gauge.
Employing the holomorphic loop equation and viewing Floer homology the other way around,
we associate to arcs asymptotic in both directions to the cusps of the Lagrangian submanifolds the critical points of an effective action implied by the holomorphic loop equation. The critical points of the effective action, being associated to the homology of the punctured Lagrangian submanifolds, consist of surface operators of the YM theory, supported on the punctures. The correlators of surface operators in the TFT satisfy for large momentum the constraint that follows by the renormalization group and by the asymptotic freedom and they are saturated by an infinite sum of pure poles of scalar and pseudoscalar glueballs, whose joint spectrum is exactly linear in the mass squared.
For several physical purposes we outline a related construction of a twistorial Topological String Theory dual to the TFT, that involves the Chern-Simons action on Lagrangian submanifolds of
twistor space.