Dynamic fracture based on Griffith's criterion
Abstract
There has been much recent progress in extending Griffith's criterion for
crack growth into mathematical models for quasi-static crack evolution
that are well-posed, in the sense that there exist solutions that can be
numerically approximated. However, mathematical progress in dynamic
fracture (crack growth consistent with Griffith's criterion, together with
elastodynamics) has been meager. We describe some recent results on a
phase-field model of dynamic fracture, as well as some models based on a
"sharp interface" instead of a phase-field.
Some possible strategies for showing existence for these last models will
also be described.
17:00
A hyperbolic pertubation of the Navier-Stokes equations
Abstract
15:45
Around Baumslag-Solitar groups
Abstract
Baumslag-Solitar groups are very simple groups which are not Hopfian (they are isomorphic to proper quotients). I will discuss these groups, as well as their obvious generalizations, with emphasis on their automorphisms and their generating sets
15:45
The story of three polytopes and what they tell us about information acquisition
Abstract
We will examine the typical structure of random polytopes by projecting the three fundamental regular polytopes: the simplex, cross-polytope, and hypercube. Along the way we will explore the implications of their structure for information acquisition and optimization. Examples of these implications include: that an N-vector with k non-zeros can be recovered computationally efficiently from only n random projections with n=2e k log(N/n), or that for a surprisingly large set of optimization problems the feasible set is actually a point. These implications are driving a new signal processing paradigm, Compressed Sensing, which has already lead to substantive improvements in various imaging modalities. This work is joint with David L. Donoho.
14:15
Allelic partition of Galton-Watson trees
Abstract
We will consider a (sub) critical Galton-Watson process with neutral mutations (infinite alleles model), and decompose the entire population into clusters of individuals carrying the same allele. We shall specify the law of this allelic partition in terms of the distribution of the number of clone-children and the number of mutant-children of a typical individual. Some limit theorems related to the distribution of the allelic partition will be also presented.
14:15
Order Parameters, Irreducible Tensors and the theory of Phase Transitions in Smectic Liquid Crystals
Abstract
We discuss how various types of orientational and
translational ordering in different liquid crystal phases are
described by macroscopic tensor order parameters. In
particular, we consider a mean-field molecular-statistical
theory of the transition from the orthogonal uniaxial smectic
phase and the tilted biaxial phase composed of biaxial
molecules. The relationship between macroscopic order
parameters, molecular invariant tensors and the symmetry of
biaxial molecules is discussed in detail. Finally we use
microscopic and macroscopic symmetry arguments to consider the
mechanisms of the ferroelectric ordering in tilted smectic
phases determined by molecular chirality.
Chern-Simons quivers and Sasaki-Einstein manifolds
Abstract
Abstract: There has been considerable interest recently in the relation between certain 3d supersymmetric Chern-Simons theories, M2-branes, and the AdS_4/CFT_3 correspondence. In this talk I will show that the moduli space of a 3d N=2 Chern-Simons quiver gauge theory always contains a certain branch of the moduli space of a parent 4d N=1 quiver gauge theory. In particular, starting with a 4d quiver theory dual to a Calabi-Yau 3-fold singularity, for certain general choices of Chern-Simons levels this branch of the corresponding 3d theory is a Calabi-Yau 4-fold singularity. This leads to a simple general method for constructing candidate 3d N=2 superconformal Chern-Simons quivers with AdS_4 gravity duals. As simple, but non-trivial, examples, I will identify a family of Chern-Simons quiver gauge theories which are candidate AdS_4/CFT_3 duals to an infinite class of toric Sasaki-Einstein seven-manifolds with explicit metrics.
14:15
Quadratic and superquadratic backward stochastic differential equations and applications
Abstract
We begin by the study of the problem of the exponential utility maximization. As opposed to most of the papers dealing with this subject, the investors’ trading strategies we allow underly constraints described by closed, but not necessarily convex, sets. Instead of the well-known convex duality approach, we apply a backward stochastic differential equation (BSDE) approach. This leads to the study of quadratic BSDEs. The second part gives the recent result on the existence and uniqueness of solution to quadratic BSDEs. We give also the connection between these BSDEs and quadratic PDEs. The last part will show that quadratic BSDE is critic. That is, if the BSDE is superquadratic, there exists always some BSDE without solution; and there is infinite many solutions when there is one solution. This phenomenon does not exist for quadratic and superquadratic PDEs.
14:00
Natural variation modulates pattern formation mechanisms during skin development
10:00
Isentropic Compression of material to determine the Equation of State (msc project)
Models of quantum phenomena
Abstract
[This is a joint seminar with OASIS]
A formulation of quantum mechanics in terms of symmetric monoidal categories
provides a logical foundation as well as a purely diagrammatic calculus for
it. This approach was initiated in 2004 in a joint paper with Samson
Abramsky (Ox). An important role is played by certain Frobenius comonoids,
abstract bases in short, which provide an abstract account both on classical
data and on quantum superposition. Dusko Pavlovic (Ox), Jamie Vicary (Ox)
and I showed that these abstract bases are indeed in 1-1 correspondence with
bases in the category of Hilbert spaces, linear maps, and the tensor
product. There is a close relation between these abstract bases and linear
logic. Joint work with Ross Duncan (Ox) shows how incompatible abstract
basis interact; the resulting structures provide a both logical and
diagrammatic account which is sufficiently expressive to describe any state
and operation of "standard" quantum theory, and solve standard problems in a
non-standard manner, either by diagrammatic rewrite or by automation.
But are there interesting non-standard models too, and what do these teach
us? In this talk we will survey the above discussed approach, present some
non-standard models, and discuss in how they provide new insights in quantum
non-locality, which arguably caused the most striking paradigm shift of any
discovery in physics during the previous century. The latter is joint work
with Bill Edwards (Ox) and Rob Spekkens (Perimeter Institute).
16:30
16:00
On the density of solutions to Diophantine equations.
Abstract
In a paper from 1994, 'The density of rational points on non-singular hypersurfaces', Heath-Brown developed a `multi-dimensional q-analogue'
of van der Corput's method of exponential sums, giving good bounds for the density of solutions to Diophantine equations in many variables. I will discuss this method and present some generalizations.
Optimal domain decomposition methods (Neumann-Neumann or FETI types) for systems of PDEs
Abstract
We focus on domain decomposition methods for systems of PDEs (versus scalar PDEs). The Smith factorization (a "pure" algebra tool) is used systematically to derive new domain decompositions methods for symmetric and unsymmetric systems of PDEs: the compressible Euler equations, the Stokes and Oseen (linearized Navier-Stokes) problem. We will focus on the Stokes system. In two dimensions the key idea is the transformation of the Stokes problem into a scalar bi-harmonic problem. We show, how a proposed domain decomposition method for the bi-harmonic problem leads to a domain decomposition method for the Stokes equations which inherits the convergence behavior of the scalar problem. Thus, it is sufficient to study the convergence of the scalar algorithm. The same procedure can also be applied to the three-dimensional Stokes problem.
Asymptotic behaviour of the Stokes problem in cylinders
Abstract
We study the asymptotics of the Stokes problem in cylinders becoming unbounded in the direction of their axis. We consider
especially the case where the forces are independent of the axis coordinate and the case where they are periodic along the axis, but the same
techniques also work in a more general framework.
We present in detail the case of constant forces (in the axial direction) since it is probably the most interesting for applications and also
because it allows to present the main ideas in the simplest way. Then we briefly present the case of periodic forces on general periodic domains. Finally, we give a result under much more general assumptions on the applied forces.
Asymptotic approximations for American options
Abstract
I shall discuss a number of problems to do with approximating the value function of an American Put option in the Black-Scholes model. This is essentially a variant of the oxygen-consumption problem, a parabolic free boundary (obstacle) problem which is closely related to the Stefan problem. Having reviewed the short-time behaviour from the perspective of ray theory, I shall focus on constructing approximations in the case when there is a discretely paid dividend yield.
Introduction to G_2 geometry (Part II)
Abstract
I will give a survey-type introduction to manifolds equipped with $G_2$ structures, emphasizing the similarities and differences with Riemannian manifolds equipped with almost complex structures, and with oriented Riemannian 3-manifolds. Along the way I may discuss the Berger classification of Riemannian holonomy, the Calabi-Yau theorem, exceptional geometric structures arising from the algebra of the Octonions, and calibrated submanifolds. This talk is the second of two parts.
16:00
'Two-point sets and the Axiom of Choice'.
Abstract
'A two-point set is a subset of the plane which meets every line in exactly two points. The existence of two-point sets was shown by Mazurkiewicz in 1914, and the main open problem concerning these objects is to determine if there exist Borel two-point sets. If this question has a positive answer, then we most likely need to be able to construct a two-point set without making use of a well-ordering of the real line, as is currently the usual technique.
We discuss recent work by Robin Knight, Rolf Suabedissen and the speaker, and (independently) by Arnold Miller, which show that it is consistent with ZF that the real line cannot be well-ordered and also that two-point sets exist.'
All roads lead to Rome: the proof of the Road Colouring Conjecture (ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2)
Compatibility conditions for the Left Cauchy Green Tensor field in 3-D
Abstract
The question of local existence of a deformation of a simply connected body whose Left Cauchy Green Tensor matches a prescribed, symmetric, positive definite tensor field is considered. A sufficient condition is deduced after formulation as a problem in Riemannian Geometry. The compatibility condition ends up being surprisingly different from that of compatibility of a Right Cauchy Green Tensor field, a fact that becomes evident after the geometric formulation. The question involves determining conditions for the local existence of solutions to an overdetermined system of Pfaffian PDEs with algebraic constraints that is typically not completely integrable.