11:00
11:00
Residual properties of amalgams
Abstract
I will discuss the circumstances in which residual finiteness properties of an amalgamated free product $A\ast_c B$ may be deduced from the properties of $A$ and $B$, with particular regard to the pro-p residual properties.
16:00
Locally compact normal spaces: omega_1-compactness and sigma-countable compactness
Abstract
ABSTRACT: A space of countable extent, also called an omega_1-compact space, is one in which every closed discrete subspace is countable. The axiom used in the following theorem is consistent if it is consistent that there is a supercompact cardinal.
Theorem 1 The LCT axiom implies that every hereditarily normal, omega_1-compact space
is sigma-countably compact, i.e., the union of countably many countably compact subspaces.
Even for the specialized subclass of monotonically normal spaces, this is only a consistency result:
Theorem 2 If club, then there exists a locally compact, omega_1-compact monotonically
normal space that is not sigma-countably compact.
These two results together are unusual in that most independence results on
monotonically normal spaces depend on whether Souslin's Hypothesis (SH) is true,
and do not involve large cardinal axioms. Here, it is not known whether either
SH or its negation affect either direction in this independence result.
The following unsolved problem is also discussed:
Problem Is there a ZFC example of a locally compact, omega_1-compact space
of cardinality aleph_1 that is not sigma-countably compact?
15:00
The Cube/AIDA algebraic attacks: generalisations and combinatorial results
Abstract
The cube attack of Dinur and Shamir and the AIDA attack of Vielhaber have been used successfully on reduced round versions of the Trivium stream cipher and a few other ciphers. These attacks can be viewed in the framework of higher order differentiation, as introduced by Lai in the cryptographic context. We generalise these attacks from the binary case to general finite fields, showing that we would need to differentiate several times with respect to each variable in order to have a reasonable chance of a successful attack. We also investigate the notion of “fast points” for a binary polynomial function f (i.e. vectors such that the derivative of f with respect to this vector has a lower than expected degree). These were introduced by Duan and Lai, motivated by the fact that higher order differential attacks are usually more efficient if they use such points. The number of functions which admit fast points were computed by Duan et al in a few particular cases; we give explicit formulae for all remaining cases and discuss the cryptographic significance of these results.
14:30
Cross-diffusion systems for image enhancement and denoising
Abstract
Diffusion processes are commonly used in image processing. In particular, complex diffusion models have been successfully applied in medical imaging denoising. The interpretation of a complex diffusion equation as a cross-diffusion system motivates the introduction of more general models of this type and their study in the context of image processing. In this talk we will discuss the use of nonlinear cross-diffusion systems to perform image restoration. We will analyse the well-posedness, scale-space properties and
long time behaviour of the models along with their performance to treat image filtering problems. Examples of application will be highlighted.
14:30
A Switching Approach to Random Graphs with a Fixed Degree Sequence
Abstract
For a fixed degree sequence D=(d_1,...,d_n), let G(D) be a uniformly chosen (simple) graph on {1,...,n} where the vertex i has degree d_i. The study of G(D) is of special interest in order to model real-world networks that can be described by their degree sequence, such as scale-free networks. While many aspects of G(D) have been extensively studied, most of the obtained results only hold provided that the degree sequence D satisfies some technical conditions. In this talk we will introduce a new approach (based on the switching method) that allows us to study the random graph G(D) imposing no conditions on D. Most notably, this approach provides a new criterion on the existence of a giant component in G(D). Moreover, this method is also useful to determine whether there exists a percolation threshold in G(D). The first part of this talk is joint work with F. Joos, D. Rautenbach and B. Reed, and the second part, with N. Fountoulakis and F. Joos.
Bounds of Minkowski type for finite complex linear groups - the answer to a question of Serre
Abstract
In 1878, Jordan showed that there is a function f on the set of natural numbers such that, if $G$ is a finite subgroup of $GL(n,C)$, then $G$ has an abelian normal subgroup of index at most $f(n)$. Early bounds were given by Frobenius and Schur, and close to optimal bounds were given by Weisfeiler in unpublished work in 1984 using the classification of finite simple groups; about ten years ago I obtained the optimal bounds. Crucially, these are "absolute" bounds; they do not address the wider question of divisibility of orders.
In 1887, Minkowski established a bound for the order of a Sylow p-subgroup of a finite subgroup of GL(n,Z). Recently, Serre asked me whether I could obtain Minkowski-like results for complex linear groups, and posed a very specific question. The answer turns out to be no, but his suggestion is actually quite close to the truth, and I shall address this question in my seminar. The answer addresses the divisibility issue in general, and it turns out that a central technical theorem on the structure of linear groups from my earlier work which there was framed as a replacement theorem can be reinterpreted as an embedding theorem and so can be used to preserve divisibility.
14:00
Sorting of micro-swimmers in flowing visco-elastic fluids
Abstract
Interactions between micro-swimmers and their complex flow environments are important in many biological systems, such as sperm cells swimming in cervical mucus or bacteria in biofilm initiation areas. We present a theoretical model describing the dynamics of micro-organisms swimming in a plane Poiseuille flow of a viscoelastic fluid, accounting for hydrodynamic interactions and biological noise. General non-Newtonian effects are investigated, including shear-thinning and normal stress differences that lead to migration of the organisms across the streamlines of the background flow. We show that micro-swimmers are driven towards the centre-line of the channel, even if countered by hydrodynamic interactions with the channel walls that typically lead to boundary accumulation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the normal stress differences reorient the swimmers at the centre-line in the direction against the flow so that they swim upstream. This suggests a natural sorting mechanism to select swimmers with a given swimming speed larger than the tunable Poiseuille flow velocity. This framework is then extended to study trapping and colony formation of pathogens near surfaces, in corners and crevices.
On-shell recursion at one loop in pure Yang-Mills theory, to an extent.
Abstract
Loop computations put the 'quantum' into quantum field theory. Much effort has focused on their structure and properties, with most spectacular progress in maximally supersymmetric gauge theories in the planar limit. These theories are however quite far from reality as described for instance in the standard model of particle physics. In this talk I'll report on ongoing work using BCFW on-shell recursion to obtain loop amplitude integrands in a much more realistic theory, pure Yang-Mills theory, using methods which apply directly to the standard model.
Number theory tools for Cryptographic Applications
Abstract
In this lecture we describe the effective Chebotarev Theorem for global function fields and show how this can be used to describe the statistics of a polynomial map f in terms of its monodromy groups. With this tool in hand, we will provide a strategy to remove the remaining heuristic in the quasi-polynomial time algorithm for discrete
logarithm problems over finite fields of small characteristic.
16:00
Curves and their fundamental groups
Abstract
I will describe a sketch of the proof of Grothendieck conjecture on fundamental groups.
16:00
Four Colours Suffice
Abstract
Part of the series 'What do historians of mathematics do?'
"In this talk I present the history and proof of the four-colour theorem: Can every map be coloured with just four colours so that neighbouring countries are coloured differently? The proof took 124 years to find, and used 1200 hours of computer time. But what did it involve, and is it really a proof?"
"Null mean curvature" flow and marginally outer trapped surfaces
Abstract
In this talk we discuss a new second order parabolic evolution equation for hypersurfaces in space-time initial data sets, that generalizes mean curvature flow (MCF). In particular, the 'null mean curvature' - a space-time extrinsic curvature quantity - replaces the usual mean curvature in the evolution equation defining MCF. This flow is motivated by the study of black holes and mass/energy inequalities in general relativity. We present a theory of weak solutions using the level-set method and outline a natural application of the flow as a parabolic approach to finding outermost marginally outer trapped surfaces (MOTS), which play the role of quasi-local black hole boundaries in general relativity. This is joint work with Kristen Moore.
Volumes of minimal hypersurfaces and stationary geodesic nets
Abstract
We will prove an upper bound for the volume of a minimal
hypersurface in a closed Riemannian manifold conformally equivalent to
a manifold with $Ric > -(n-1)$. In the second part of the talk we will
construct a sweepout of a closed 3-manifold with positive Ricci
curvature by 1-cycles of controlled length and prove an upper bound
for the length of a stationary geodesic net. These are joint works
with Parker Glynn-Adey (Toronto) and Xin Zhou (MIT).
14:15
Quantitative Liouville theorems for equations of the Schouten tensor in conformal geometry.
Abstract
The classical Yamabe problem asks to find in a given conformal class a metric of constant scalar curvature. In fully nonlinear analogues, the scalar curvature is replaced by certain functions of the eigenvalue of the Schouten curvature tensor. I will report on quantitative Liouville theorems and fine blow-up analysis for these problems. Joint work with Yanyan Li.
Heat equation driven by a space-time fractional noise
Abstract
The extension of standard stochastic models (SDEs, SPDEs) to general fractional noises is known to be a tricky issue, which cannot be studied within the classical martingale setting. We will see how the recently-introduced theory of regularity structures allows us to overcome these difficulties, in the case of a heat equation model with non-linear perturbation driven by a space-time fractional Brownian motion.
The analysis relies in particular on the exhibition of an explicit process at the core of the dynamics, the so-called K-rough path, the definition of which shows strong similarities with that of a classical rough path.
A metric and geometry for heterotic moduli
Abstract
Heterotic vacua, defined with a holomorphic bundle and connection satisfying hermitian Yang-Mills, realise four-dimensional chiral gauge theories. We exploit the rich interplay between four-dimensional physics, supersymmetry and geometry to construct a natural Kaehler metric for the moduli space, with a shockingly simple Kaehler potential. Along the way, we discover a natural geometric structure for the heterotic moduli.
Speaking and listening
Abstract
What is the point of giving a talk? What is the point of going to a talk? In this presentation, which is intended to have a lot of audience participation, I would like to explore how one should prepare talks for different audiences and different occasions, and what one should try to get out of going to a talk.
Bayesian parameter estimation for stochastic dynamic biological models
The cotangent complex and the derived de Rham algebra
Abstract
This is a survey (with some proofs) of chapter 2 of the notes http://renyi.mta.hu/~szamuely/beilintronew.pdf of T. Szamuely and G. Zabradi on Beilinson's approach to the p-adic Hodge decomposition theorem.