Tue, 12 Oct 2010

14:00 - 15:00
SR1

(HoRSe seminar) Spherical objects on K3 surfaces I

Daniel Huybrechts
(Bonn)
Abstract

Both parts will deal with spherical objects in the bounded derived

category of coherent sheaves on K3 surfaces. In the first talk I will

focus on cycle theoretic aspects. For this we think of the Grothendieck

group of the derived category as the Chow group of the K3 surface (which

over the complex numbers is infinite-dimensional due to a result of

Mumford). The Bloch-Beilinson conjecture predicts that over number

fields the Chow group is small and I will show that this is equivalent to

the derived category being generated by spherical objects (which

I do not know how to prove). In the second talk I will turn to stability

conditions and show that a stability condition is determined by its

behavior with respect to the discrete collections of spherical objects.

Mon, 11 Oct 2010

17:00 - 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Modeling and simulation of vectorfields on membranes

Georg Dolzmann
(Universitaet Regensburg)
Abstract

The fundamental models for lipid bilayers are curvature based and neglect the internal structure of the lipid layers. In this talk, we explore models with an additional order parameter which describes the orientation of the lipid molecules in the membrane and compare their predictions based on numerical simulations. This is joint work with Soeren Bartels (Bonn) and Ricardo Nochetto (College Park).

Mon, 11 Oct 2010

16:00 - 17:00
L2

Conics on the Fermat quintic threefold

Damiano Testa
(Mathematical Insitute, Oxford)
Abstract

(Note that the talk will be in L2 and not the usual SR1)

Many interesting features of algebraic varieties are encoded in the spaces of rational curves that they contain. For instance, a smooth cubic surface in complex projective three-dimensional space contains exactly 27 lines; exploiting the configuration of these lines it is possible to find a (rational) parameterization of the points of the cubic by the points in the complex projective plane.

After a general overview, we focus on the Fermat quintic threefold X, namely the hypersurface in four-dimensional projective space with equation x^5+y^5+z^5+u^5+v^5=0. The space of lines on X is well-known. I will explain how to use a mix of algebraic geometry, number theory and computer-assisted calculations to study the space of conics on X.

This talk is based on joint work with R. Heath-Brown.

Mon, 11 Oct 2010
15:45
Eagle House

Spectral asymptotics for continuum random trees

Ben Hambly
Abstract

We review the problem of determining the high frequency asymptotics of the spectrum of the Laplacian and its relationship to the geometry of a domain. We then establish these asymptotics for some continuum random trees as well as the scaling limit of the critical random graph.

Mon, 11 Oct 2010
14:15
Eagle House

Joint continuity for the solutions to a class of nonlinear SPDEs

Jie Xiong
(University of Tennessee)
Abstract

For a superprocess in a random environment in one dimensional space, a nonlinear stochastic partial differential equation is derived for its density by Dawson-Vaillancourt-Wang (2000). The joint continuity was left as an open problem. In this talk, we will give an affirmative answer to this problem.

Fri, 08 Oct 2010

11:15 - 13:00
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

OCCAM Group Meeting

Various
Abstract
  • Simon Cotter presents:       “Chemical Fokker-Planck equation and multiscale modelling of (bio)chemical systems”
  • Lian Duan presents:            “History matching problems using Bspline Parameterization”
  • Chris Prior presents:          “Helices, tubes and the Fourier Transform”
Thu, 07 Oct 2010

14:00 - 15:00
Gibson Grd floor SR

A fast and simple algorithm for the computation of Legendre coefficients

Prof. Arieh Iserles
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

We present an O(N logN) algorithm for the calculation of the first N coefficients in an expansion of an analytic function in Legendre polynomials. In essence, the algorithm consists of an integration of a suitably weighted function along an ellipse, a task which can be accomplished with Fast Fourier Transform, followed by some post-processing.

Mon, 04 Oct 2010
17:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Hilbert's Sixth Problem

Tai Ping Liu
(Stanford University)
Abstract

Hilbert Sixth Problem of Axiomatization of Physics is a problem of general nature and not of specific problem. We will concentrate on the kinetic theory; the relations between the Newtonian particle systems, the Boltzmann equation and the fluid dynamics. This is a rich area of applied mathematics and mathematical physics. We will illustrate the richness with some examples, survey recent progresses and raise open research directions.

Wed, 29 Sep 2010

09:30 - 11:15
Gibson Grd floor SR

OxMOS Final Year Students - Research Updates

Abstract

Presentations by:

09.30 am Bernhard Langwallner Continuum limits of atomistic energies and new computational models of fracture

09.50 am Yasemin Sengul Well-posedness of dynamics

10.10 am Kostas Koumatos X-interfaces and nonclassical austenite-martensite interfaces

10.30 am Tim Squires Models for breast cancer and heart tissue

Fri, 24 Sep 2010
16:00
L3

Groupoid quantales beyond the étale setting

Dr Alessandra Palmigiano
(University of Amsterdam.)
Abstract

Abstract: Quantales are ordered algebras which can be thought of as pointfree noncommutative topologies. In recent years, their connections have been studied with fundamental notions in noncommutative geometry such as groupoids and C*-algebras. In particular, the setting of quantales corresponding to étale groupoids has been very well understood: a bijective correspondence has been defined between localic étale groupoids and inverse quantale frames. We present an equivalent but independent way of defining this correspondence for topological étale groupoids and we extend this correspondence to a non-étale setting.

Fri, 09 Jul 2010

11:45 - 13:00
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

OCCAM Group Meeting

Various
(OCCAM, University of Oxford)
Abstract

OCCAM Group Meeting 09.07.10

Thu, 08 Jul 2010

14:30 - 17:30
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

Predicting Winding Stresses in Wound Coils

Frank Dehoog
(CSIRO)
Abstract

Wound coils or rolls accumulate essentially flat strip compactly without folding or cutting and typically, strip is wound and unwound a number of times before its end use. The variety of material that is wound into coils or rolls is very extensive and includes magnetic tape, paper, cellophane, plastics, fabric and metals such as aluminium and steel.

Stresses wound into a coil provide its structural integrity via the frictional forces between the wraps. For a coil with inadequate inter-wrap pressure, the wraps may slip or telescope (causing surface scuffing) or the coil may slump and collapse. On the other hand, large internal stresses can cause increased creep and stress relaxation, collapse at the bore, stress wrinkling and rupture of the material in the coil.

Given the range of applications, it is not surprising that the literature on calculating stresses in wound coils is large and has a long history, which goes back at least to the wire winding of gun barrels. However the basic approach of the resulting accretion models, where the residual stress is recalculated each time a layer is added, has remained essentially the same. In this talk, we take a radically different approach in analysing the winding stresses in coils. Instead of the traditional method, we seek to deduce a winding policy that will achieve a target distribution of residual stresses within a coil. In this way, optimising the coiling tension profile is much more straight-forward, by

* Specifying the residue stresses required to avoid operational problems, tight-bore collapses, and other issues such as scuffing, then

* Determining the winding tension profile to produce the required residue stresses.

Thu, 08 Jul 2010

10:00 - 11:00
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

Volcanic test of climate mechanisms

Professor Georgiy L. Stenchikov
(KAUST)
Abstract

Strong explosive volcanic eruptions could inject in the lower stratosphere million tons of SO2, which being converted to sulfate aerosols, affect radiative balance of the planet for a few years. During this period the volcanic radiative forcing dominates other forcings producing distinct detectable climate responses. Therefore volcanic impacts provide invaluable natural test of climate nonlinearities and feedback mechanisms. In this talk I will overview volcanic impacts on tropospheric and strsatospheric temperature, ozone, high-latitude circulation, stratosphere-troposphere dynamic interaction, and focus on the long-term volcanic effect on ocean heat content and sea level.

Fri, 02 Jul 2010

11:45 - 13:00
DH 3rd floor SR

Forecasting of yield curves using local state space reconstruction

Eurico COVAS
(HSBC)
Abstract

This workshop is half-seminar, half-workshop. \\ \\ HSBC have an on-going problem and they submitted a proposal for an MSc in Applied Stats project on this topic. Unfortunately, the project was submitted too late for this cohort of students. Eurico will talk about "the first approach at the problem" but please be aware that it is an open problem which requires further work. Eurico's abstract is as follows. \\ \\

This article examines modelling yield curves through chaotic dynamical systems whose dynamics can be unfolded using non-linear embeddings in higher dimensions. We then refine recent techniques used in the state space reconstruction of spatially extended time series in order to forecast the dynamics of yield curves.

We use daily LIBOR GBP data (January 2007-June 2008) in order to perform forecasts over a 1-month horizon. Our method seems to outperform random walk and other benchmark models on the basis of mean square forecast error criteria.