Tue, 03 Nov 2009

14:30 - 15:30
L3

A general class of self-dual percolation models

Oliver Riordan
(Oxford)
Abstract
One of the main aims in the theory of percolation is to find the `critical probability' above which long range connections emerge from random local connections with a given pattern and certain individual probabilities. The quintessential example is Kesten's result from 1980 that if the edges of the square lattice are selected independently with probability $p$, then long range connections appear if and only if $p>1/2$.  The starting point is a certain self-duality property, observed already in the early 60s; the difficulty is not in this observation, but in proving that self-duality does imply criticality in this setting.

Since Kesten's result, more complicated duality properties have been used to determine a variety of other critical probabilities. Recently, Scullard and Ziff have described a very general class of self-dual percolation models; we show that for the entire class (in fact, a larger class), self-duality does imply criticality.

Tue, 03 Nov 2009

14:00 - 15:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

An alternative approach to regularity for the Navier-Stokes equations in critical spaces

Gabriel Koch
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

We present an alternative viewpoint on recent studies of regularity of solutions to the Navier-Stokes equations in critical spaces. In particular, we prove that mild solutions which remain bounded in the

space $\dot H^{1/2}$ do not become singular in finite time, a result which was proved in a more general setting by L. Escauriaza, G. Seregin and V. Sverak using a different approach. We use the method of "concentration-compactness" + "rigidity theorem" which was recently developed by C. Kenig and F. Merle to treat critical dispersive equations. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first instance in which this method has been applied to a parabolic equation. This is joint work with Carlos Kenig.

Tue, 03 Nov 2009
12:00
L3

Late-time tails of self-gravitating waves

Piotr Bizon
(Jagiellonian University)
Abstract
I will present recent joint work with Tadek Chmaj and Andrzej Rostworowski concerning late-time behavior of self-gravitating massless fields.  We show that the asymptotic convergence to a static equilibrium (Minkowski or Schwarzschild) is an essentially nonlinear phenomenon which cannot, despite many assertions to the contrary in the literature, be properly described by the theory of linearized perturbations on a fixed static asymptotically flat background (so called Price's tails). To substantiate this claim in the case of small initial data we compute the late-time tails (both the decay rate and the amplitude) in four and higher even spacetime dimensions using nonlinear perturbation theory and we verify the results numerically. The reason for considering this problem in higher dimensions was motivated by the desire to demonstrate an accidental and misleading character of equality of decay rates of
linear and nonlinear tails in four dimensions. 

Mon, 02 Nov 2009

17:00 - 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

A uniqueness result for graphs of least gradient

Thomas Schmidt
(Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)
Abstract

We investigate the minimization problem for the variational integral

$$\int_\Omega\sqrt{1+|Dw|^2}\,dx$$

in Dirichlet classes of vector-valued functions $w$. It is well known that

the existence of minimizers can be established if the problem is formulated

in a generalized way in the space of functions of bounded variation. In

this talk we will discuss a uniqueness theorem for these generalized

minimizers. Actually, the theorem holds for a larger class of variational

integrals with linear growth and was obtained in collaboration with Lisa

Beck (SNS Pisa).

Mon, 02 Nov 2009

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Dynamical Vacuum Selection and Supersymmetry Breaking in String Theory

Jock McOrist
(Cambridge)
Abstract
Intersecting brane models in string theory have proven a useful tool for studying the dynamics of quantum field theories. I will describe how certain brane models may be used to shed light on the phenomenon of supersymmetry breaking and vacuum selection in a cosmological context.
Fri, 30 Oct 2009
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Jump-Diffusion Risk-Sensitive Asset Management Mark H.A. Davis, Sebastien Lleo

Mark Davis
(Imperial)
Abstract

This paper considers a portfolio optimization problem in which asset prices are represented by SDEs driven by Brownian motion and a Poisson random measure, with drifts that are functions of an auxiliary diffusion 'factor' process. The criterion, following earlier work by Bielecki, Pliska, Nagai and others, is risk-sensitive optimization (equivalent to maximizing the expected growth rate subject to a constraint on variance.) By using a change of measure technique introduced by Kuroda and Nagai we show that the problem reduces to solving a certain stochastic control problem in the factor process, which has no jumps. The main result of the paper is that the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation for this problem has a classical solution. The proof uses Bellman's "policy improvement"

method together with results on linear parabolic PDEs due to Ladyzhenskaya et al. This is joint work with Sebastien Lleo.

Thu, 29 Oct 2009
17:00
L3

VC density for formulas in some NIP theories

Deirdre Haskell
(Mcmaster)
Abstract

VC dimension and density are properties of a collection of sets which come from probability theory.  It was observed by Laskowski that there is a close tie between these notions and the model-theoretic property called NIP. This tie results in many examples of collections of sets that have finite VC dimension. In general, it is difficult to find upper bounds for the VC dimension, and known bounds are mostly very large. However, the VC density seems to be more accessible. In this talk, I will explain all of the above acronyms, and present a theorem which gives an upper bound (in some cases optimal) on the VC density of formulae in some examples of NIP theories. This represents joint work of myself with M. Aschenbrenner, A. Dolich, D. Macpherson and S.

Starchenko.

 

 

 

Thu, 29 Oct 2009

16:30 - 17:30
DH 1st floor SR

Frank-Read sources and the yield of anisotropic cubic crystals

Steve Fitzgerald
(EURATOM/UKAEA Fusion Association (Oxford))
Abstract

Frank-Read sources are among the most important mechanisms of dislocation multiplication,

and their operation signals the onset of yield in crystals. We show that the critical

stress required to initiate dislocation production falls dramatically at high elastic

anisotropy, irrespective of the mean shear modulus. We hence predict the yield stress of

crystals to fall dramatically as their anisotropy increases. This behaviour is consistent

with the severe plastic softening observed in alpha-iron and ferritic steels as the

alpha − gamma martensitic phase transition is approached, a temperature regime of crucial

importance for structural steels designed for future nuclear applications.

Thu, 29 Oct 2009

14:00 - 15:00
3WS SR

Is the Outer Solar System Chaotic?

Dr. Wayne Hayes
(UC Irvine and Imperial College London)
Abstract

The stability of our Solar System has been debated since Newton devised

the laws of gravitation to explain planetary motion. Newton himself

doubted the long-term stability of the Solar System, and the question

has remained unanswered despite centuries of intense study by

generations of illustrious names such as Laplace, Langrange, Gauss, and

Poincare. Finally, in the 1990s, with the advent of computers fast

enough to accurately integrate the equations of motion of the planets

for billions of years, the question has finally been settled: for the

next 5 billion years, and barring interlopers, the shapes of the

planetary orbits will remain roughly as they are now. This is called

"practical stability": none of the known planets will collide with each

other, fall into the Sun, or be ejected from the Solar System, for the

next 5 billion years.

Although the Solar System is now known to be practically stable, it may

still be "chaotic". This means that we may---or may not---be able

precisely to predict the positions of the planets within their orbits,

for the next 5 billion years. The precise positions of the planets

effects the tilt of each planet's axis, and so can have a measurable

effect on the Earth's climate. Although the inner Solar System is

almost certainly chaotic, for the past 15 years, there has been

some debate about whether the outer Solar System exhibits chaos or not.

In particular, when performing numerical integrations of the orbits of

the outer planets, some astronomers observe chaos, and some do not. This

is particularly disturbing since it is known that inaccurate integration

can inject chaos into a numerical solution whose exact solution is known

to be stable.

In this talk I will demonstrate how I closed that 15-year debate on

chaos in the outer solar system by performing the most carefully justified

high precision integrations of the orbits of the outer planets that has

yet been done. The answer surprised even the astronomical community,

and was published in _Nature Physics_.

I will also show lots of pretty pictures demonstrating the fractal nature

of the boundary between chaos and regularity in the outer Solar System.

Thu, 29 Oct 2009

12:00 - 13:00
SR1

The problem of the homotopy invariance of configuration spaces

George Raptis
(Oxford)
Abstract

The talk is about the homotopy type of configuration spaces. Once upon a time there was a conjecture that it is a homotopy invariant of closed manifolds. I will discuss the strong evidence supporting this claim, together with its recent disproof by a counterexample. Then I will talk about the corrected version of the original conjecture.

Wed, 28 Oct 2009
11:30
ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2

When good groups go bad

Owen Cotton-Barratt
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Much of group theory is concerned with whether one property entails another. When such a question is answered in the negative it is often via a pathological example. We will examine the Rips construction, an important tool for producing such pathologies, and touch upon a recent refinement of the construction and some applications. In the course of this we will introduce and consider the profinite topology on a group, various separability conditions, and decidability questions in groups.

Tue, 27 Oct 2009

17:00 - 18:00
L2

Birational Geometry via Auslander Algebras

Michael Wemyss
(Oxford)
Abstract

I'll explain how the `Auslander philosophy' from finite dimensional algebras gives new methods to tackle problems in higher-dimensional birational geometry. The geometry tells us what we want to be true in the algebra and conversely the algebra gives us methods of establishing derived equivalences (and other phenomenon) in geometry. Algebraically two of the main consequences are a version of AR duality that covers non-isolated singularities and also a theory of mutation which applies to quivers that have both loops and two-cycles.