InFoMM CDT Group Meeting
The Group Meeting will be held virtually unless the Covid 19 lockdown is over in which case the location will be L2.
The Group Meeting will be held virtually unless the Covid 19 lockdown is over in which case the location will be L2.
Part of UK virtual operator algebra seminar: https://sites.google.com/view/uk-operator-algebras-seminar/home
Since the work of von Neumann, the theory of operator algebras has been closely linked to the theory of groups. On the one hand, operator algebras constructed from groups provide an important source of examples and insight. On the other hand, many problems about groups are most naturally studied within an operator-algebraic framework. In this talk I will give an overview of some problems relating the structure of a group to the structure of a corresponding C*-algebra. I will discuss recent results and some possible future directions.
Part of UK virtual operator algebra seminar: https://sites.google.com/view/uk-operator-algebras-seminar/home
The study of non-local games has involved fruitful interactions between operator algebra theory and quantum physics, with a starting point the link between the Connes Embedding Problem and the Tsirelson Problem, uncovered by Junge et al (2011) and Ozawa (2013). Particular instances of non-local games, such as binary constraint system games and synchronous games, have played an important role in the pursuit of the resolution of these problems. In this talk, I will summarise part of the operator algebraic toolkit that has proved useful in the study of non-local games and of their perfect strategies, highlighting the role C*-algebras and operator systems play in their mathematical understanding.
This term's IAM seminar, a bi-weekly series entitled, 'OCIAM learns about ...' will involve internal speakers giving a general introduction to a topic on which they are experts.
Join the seminar in Zoom
https://zoom.us/j/91733296449?pwd=c29vMDluR0RCRHJia2JEcW1LUVZjUT09
Meeting ID: 917 3329 6449Password: 329856One
This week Professor Dominic Vella will talk about wrinkling
In this talk I will provide an overview of recent work on the wrinkling of thin elastic objects. In particular, the focus of the talk will be on answering questions that arise in recent applications that seek not to avoid, but rather, exploit wrinkling. Such applications usually take place far beyond the threshold of instability and so key themes will be the limitations of “standard” instability analysis, as well as what analysis should be performed instead. I will discuss the essential ingredients of this ‘Far-from-Threshold’ analysis, as well as outlining some open questions.
Abstract: We use a deep neural network to generate controllers for optimal trading on high frequency data. For the first time, a neural network learns the mapping between the preferences of the trader, i.e. risk aversion parameters, and the optimal controls. An important challenge in learning this mapping is that in intraday trading, trader's actions influence price dynamics in closed loop via the market impact. The exploration--exploitation tradeoff generated by the efficient execution is addressed by tuning the trader's preferences to ensure long enough trajectories are produced during the learning phase. The issue of scarcity of financial data is solved by transfer learning: the neural network is first trained on trajectories generated thanks to a Monte-Carlo scheme, leading to a good initialization before training on historical trajectories. Moreover, to answer to genuine requests of financial regulators on the explainability of machine learning generated controls, we project the obtained ``blackbox controls'' on the space usually spanned by the closed-form solution of the stylized optimal trading problem, leading to a transparent structure. For more realistic loss functions that have no closed-form solution, we show that the average distance between the generated controls and their explainable version remains small. This opens the door to the acceptance of ML-generated controls by financial regulators.
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I introduce a recently developed variational approach for hyperbolic PDE's. The method allows to show the existence of weak solutions to fluid-structure interactions where a visco-elastic bulk solid is interacting with an incompressible fluid governed by the unsteady Navier Stokes equations. This is a joint work with M. Kampschulte and B. Benesova.
Forcing axioms state that the universe inherits certain properties of generic extensions for a given class of forcings. They are usually formulated via the existence of filters, but several alternative characterisations are known. For instance, Bagaria (2000) characterised some forcing axioms via generic absoluteness for objects of size $\omega_1$. In a related new approach, we consider principles stating the existence of filters that induce correct evaluations of sufficiently simple names in prescribed ways. For example, for the properties ‘nonempty’ or ‘unbounded in $\omega_1$’, consider the principle: whenever this property is forced for a given sufficiently simple name, then there exists a filter inducing an evaluation with the same property. This class of principles turns out to be surprisingly general: we will see how to characterise most known forcing axioms, but also some combinatorial principles that are not known to be equivalent to forcing axioms. This is recent joint work in progress with Christopher Turner.
I will discuss joint work with Eero Saksman (Helsinki) describing the statistical behavior of the Riemann zeta function on the critical line in terms of complex Gaussian multiplicative chaos. Time permitting, I will also discuss connections to random matrix theory as well as some recent joint work with Saksman and Adam Harper (Warwick) relating powers of the absolute value of the zeta function to real multiplicative chaos.
Abstract: The calibration problem for local stochastic volatility models leads to two-dimensional stochastic differential equations of McKean-Vlasov type. In these equations, the conditional distribution of the second component of the solution given the first enters the equation for the first component of the solution. While such equations enjoy frequent application in the financial industry, their mathematical analysis poses a major challenge. I will explain how to prove the strong existence of stationary solutions for these equations, as well as the strong uniqueness in an important special case. Based on joint work with Daniel Lacker and Jiacheng Zhang.
In this talk I will present results from an ongoing joint research program with Konrad Waldorf. Its main goal is to understand the relation between gerbes on a manifold M and open-closed smooth field theories on M. Gerbes can be viewed as categorified line bundles, and we will see how gerbes with connections on M and their sections give rise to smooth open-closed field theories on M. If time permits, we will see that the field theories arising in this way have several characteristic properties, such as invariance under thin homotopies, and that they carry positive reflection structures. From a physical perspective, ourconstruction formalises the WZW amplitude as part of a smooth bordism-type field theory.
I will describe an ongoing research project which aims to encode the DT invariants of a CY3 triangulated category in a geometric structure on its space of stability conditions. More specifically we expect to find a complex hyperkahler structure on the total space of the tangent bundle. These ideas are closely related to the work of Gaiotto, Moore and Neitzke from a decade ago. The main analytic input is a class of Riemann-Hilbert problems involving maps from the complex plane to an algebraic torus with prescribed discontinuities along a collection of rays.
We will show that minimally supersymmetric SU(N+2) SQCD models in the middle of the conformal window can be engineered by compactifying certain 6d SCFTs on three punctured spheres. The geometric construction of the 4d theories predicts numerous interesting strong coupling effects, such as IR symmetry enhancements and duality. We will discuss this interplay between simple geometric and group theoretic considerations and complicated field theoretic strong coupling phenomena. For example, one of the dualities arising geometrically from different pair-of-pants decompositions of a four punctured sphere is an $SU(N+2)$ generalization of the Intriligator-Pouliot duality of $SU(2)$ SQCD with $N_f=4$, which is a degenerate, $N=0$, instance of our discussion.
Paolo Aceto
Knot concordance and homology cobordisms of 3-manifolds
We introduce the notion of knot concordance for knots in the 3-sphere and discuss some key problems regarding the smooth concordance group. After defining homology cobordisms of 3-manifolds we introduce the integral and rational homology cobordism groups and briefly discuss their relationship with the concordance group. We conclude stating a few recent results and open questions on the structure of these groups.
Contagion maps are a family of maps that map nodes of a network to points in a high-dimensional space, based on the activations times in a threshold contagion on the network. A point cloud that is the image of such a map reflects both the structure underlying the network and the spreading behaviour of the contagion on it. Intuitively, such a point cloud exhibits features of the network's underlying structure if the contagion spreads along that structure, an observation which suggests contagion maps as a viable manifold-learning technique. We test contagion maps as a manifold-learning tool on several different data sets, and compare its performance to that of Isomap, one of the most well-known manifold-learning algorithms. We find that, under certain conditions, contagion maps are able to reliably detect underlying manifold structure in noisy data, when Isomap is prone to noise-induced error. This consolidates contagion maps as a technique for manifold learning.
Pattern formation emerges during development from the interplay between gene regulatory networks (GRNs) acting at the single cell level and cell movements driving tissue level morphogenetic changes. As a result, the timing of cell specification and the dynamics of morphogenesis must be tightly cross-regulated. In the developing zebrafish, mesoderm progenitors will spend varying amounts of time (from 5 to 10hrs) in the tailbud before entering the pre-somitic mesoderm (PSM) and initiating a stereotypical transcriptional trajectory towards a mesodermal fate. In contrast, when dissociated and placed in vitro, these progenitors differentiate synchronously in around 5 hours. We have used a data-driven mathematical modelling approach to reverse-engineer a GRN that is able to tune the timing of mesodermal differentiation as progenitors leave the tailbud’s signalling environment, which also explains our in vitro observations. This GRN recapitulates pattern formation at the tissue level when modelled on cell tracks obtained from live-imaging a developing PSM. Our “live-modelling” framework also allows us to simulate how perturbations to the GRN affect the emergence of pattern in zebrafish mutants. We are now extending this analysis to cichlid fishes in order to explore the regulation of developmental time in evolution.
Following Grothendieck, periods can be interpreted as numbers arising as coefficients of a comparison isomorphism between two cohomology theories. Due to the influence of the “yoga of motives” these numbers are omnipresent in arithmetic algebraic geometry. The first part of the talk will be a crash course on how to study periods, as well as the action of the motivic Galois group on them, via an elementary category of realizations. In the second part, we will see how one uses this framework to study Feynman integrals -- an interesting family of periods arising in quantum field theory. We will finish with a brief overview of some of the recent work in algebraic geometry inspired by the study of periods arising in physics.
Consider a network of identical phase oscillators with sinusoidal coupling. How likely are the oscillators to globally synchronize, starting from random initial phases? One expects that dense networks have a strong tendency to synchronize and the basin of attraction for the synchronous state to be the whole phase space. But, how dense is dense enough? In this (hopefully) entertaining Zoom talk, we use techniques from numerical linear algebra and computational Algebraic geometry to derive the densest known networks that do not synchronize and the sparsest networks that do. This is joint work with Steven Strogatz and Mike Stillman.
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In the talk, we study the Navier–Stokes-like problems for the flows of homogeneous incompressible fluids. We introduce a new type of boundary condition for the shear stress tensor, which includes an auxiliary stress function and the time derivative of the velocity. The auxiliary stress function serves to relate the normal stress to the slip velocity via rather general maximal monotone graph. In such way, we are able to capture the dynamic response of the fluid on the boundary. Also, the constitutive relation inside the domain is formulated implicitly. The main result is the existence analysis for these problems.
This is a joint work with C.Daw in progress. We study the L_{omega_1,omega}-theory of the modular functions j_n: H -> Y(n). In other words, H is seen here as the universal cover in the class of modular curves. The setting is different from one considered before by Adam Harris and Chris Daw: GL(2,Q) is given here as the sort without naming its individual elements. As usual in the study of 'pseudo-analytic cover structures', the statement of categoricity is equivalent to certain arithmetic conditions, the most challenging of which is to determine the Galois action on CM-points. This turns out to be equivalent to determining the Galois action on SL(2,\hat{Z})/(-1), that is a subgroup of
Out SL(2,\hat{Z})/(-1) induced by the action of Gal_Q. We find by direct matrix calculations a subgroup Out_* of the outer automorphisms group which contains the image of Gal_Q. Moreover, we prove that Out_* is the image of Drinfeld's group GT (Grothendieck-Teichmuller group) under a natural homomorphism.
It is a reasonable to conjecture that Out_* is equal to the image of Gal_Q, which would imply the categoricity statement. It follows from the above that our conjecture is a consequence of Drinfeld's conjecture which states that GT is isomorphic to Gal_Q.