Mon, 30 Apr 2007
15:45
DH 3rd floor SR

Stochastic flows, panar aggregation and the Brownian web

Dr Amanda Turner
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

 

Diffusion limited aggregation (DLA) is a random growth model which was

originally introduced in 1981 by Witten and Sander. This model is prevalent in

nature and has many applications in the physical sciences as well as industrial

processes. Unfortunately it is notoriously difficult to understand, and only one

rigorous result has been proved in the last 25 years. We consider a simplified

version of DLA known as the Eden model which can be used to describe the growth

of cancer cells, and show that under certain scaling conditions this model gives

rise to a limit object known as the Brownian web.

Mon, 30 Apr 2007
14:15
DH 3rd floor SR

Parabolic Anderson model: Localisation of mass in random media

Dr Nadia Sidorova
(University of Bath)
Abstract

 

We study the parabolic Anderson problem, i.e., the heat equation on the d-dimentional

integer lattice with independent identically distributed random potential and

localised initial condition. Our interest is in the long-term behaviour of the

random total mass of the unique non-negative solution, and we prove the complete

localisation of mass for potentials with polynomial tails.

 

Mon, 30 Apr 2007
12:00
DH 2nd floor SR

Team Meeting

Abstract

Team meetings, held roughly every four weeks, are open to anyone who is

interested. OxMOS post docs and Dphil students will give updates on the

research.

Mon, 30 Apr 2007
12:00
L3

D-brane superpotentials and RG flows on the quintic

Ilka Brunner
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract
    The behaviour of D2-branes on the quintic under complex structure deformations is analysed by combining Landau-Ginzburg techniques with methods from conformal field theory. It is shown that the boundary renormalisation group flow induced by the bulk deformations is realised as a gradient flow of the effective space time superpotential which is calculated explicitly to all orders in the boundary coupling constant.
Fri, 27 Apr 2007
11:45
DH 3rd floor SR

Waxy Oils

Lorenzo Fusi
(Dept. of Ulisse Dini, Florence)
Thu, 26 Apr 2007
16:30
DH 1st floor SR

Biological applications of reaction diffusion equations and low Reynolds number fluid dynamics

Eamonn Gaffney
(Oxford)
Abstract
 

Aspects of my current research will be reviewed. In terms of reaction diffusion equations, I will review current work on cancer modelling and biological pattern formation. I will then proceed to consider biological applications of low Reynolds number fluid dynamics with respect to cilia-induced flows in the lung and human spermatozoa dynamics.  

 
Thu, 26 Apr 2007

14:00 - 15:00
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, nr Didcot

Multigrid solvers for quantum dynamics - a first look

Dr Scott McLachlan
(Delft University of Technology)
Abstract

The numerical study of lattice quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is an attempt to extract predictions about the world around us from the standard model of physics. Worldwide, there are several large collaborations on lattice QCD methods, with terascale computing power dedicated to these problems. Central to the computation in lattice QCD is the inversion of a series of fermion matrices, representing the interaction of quarks on a four-dimensional space-time lattice. In practical computation, this inversion may be approximated based on the solution of a set of linear systems.

In this talk, I will present a basic description of the linear algebra problems in lattice QCD and why we believe that multigrid methods are well-suited to effectively solving them. While multigrid methods are known to be efficient solution techniques for many operators, those arising in lattice QCD offer new challenges, not easily handled by classical multigrid and algebraic multigrid approaches. The role of adaptive multigrid techniques in addressing the fermion matrices will be highlighted, along with preliminary results for several model problems.

Mon, 23 Apr 2007
15:45
DH 3rd floor SR

SPDE's driven by Poissonian noise

Dr Erika Hausenblas
Abstract
 

First I will introduce Poisson random measures and their connection to Levy processes.  Then SPDE