Tue, 07 May 2019

14:30 - 15:00
L5

Fireshape, a look under the hood

Alberto Paganini
(Oxford)
Abstract

Fireshape is a shape optimization library based on finite elements. In this talk I will describe how Florian Wechsung and I developed Fireshape and will share my reflections on lessons learned through the process.

Tue, 07 May 2019

14:30 - 15:30
L6

Around Brooks' theorem

Marthe Bonamy
Further Information

In this talk, we will discuss various results around Brooks' theorem: a graph has chromatic number at most its maximum degree, unless it is a clique or an odd cycle. We will consider stronger variants and local versions, as well as the structure of the solution space of all corresponding colorings.

Tue, 07 May 2019

14:00 - 14:30
L5

Sharp error bounds for Ritz vectors and approximate singular vectors

Yuji Nakatsukasa
(Oxford)
Abstract

We derive sharp bounds for the accuracy of approximate eigenvectors (Ritz vectors) obtained by the Rayleigh-Ritz process for symmetric eigenvalue problems. Using information that is available or easy to estimate, our bounds improve the classical Davis-Kahan sin-theta theorem by a factor that can be arbitrarily large, and can give nontrivial information even when the sin-theta theorem suggests that a Ritz vector might have no accuracy at all. We also present extensions in three directions, deriving error bounds for invariant subspaces, singular vectors and subspaces computed by a (Petrov-Galerkin) projection SVD method, and eigenvectors of self-adjoint operators on a Hilbert space.

Tue, 07 May 2019

12:00 - 13:00
C4

Selected aspects of commuting in the vicinity of Warsaw

Mariola Chrzanowska
(Warsaw University of Life Sciences)
Abstract

Commuting concerns people’s spatial behaviour resulting from the geographic separation of home and workplace and is connected with their willingness to seek economic opportunities outside their place of residence (Rouwendal J., Nijkamp P., 2004). Such opportunities are usually found in the urban areas, so this phenomenon is often a subject of urban studies or research focusing on city centres (Drejerska N., Chrzanowska M., 2014). In literature, commuting patterns are used to determine the boundaries of local and regional labour markets. Furthermore, labour market is one of the most important features for the delimitation of functional regions, as commuting involves not only working outside one’s place of residence but also, among other things, using various services offered there, from shopping to health or cultural services. Taking this into account, it can be stated that commuting is an important characteristic of relations between territories, and these relations form complex networks.

People decide to commute to work for various reasons. Most commuters travel from a small town, village or rural area to a city or town where they have a wider range of employment opportunities. However, people differ in their attitudes toward commuting. While some people find it troublesome, others enjoy their daily travel. There are also people who regard commuting as the necessary condition for supporting themselves and their families. Therefore, commuting is an important factor that should be taken into account in the research on the quality of life and quality of work.

The main goals of this presentation is to identify and analyse relations between communities (municipalities) from the perspective of labour market, especially commuting in the vicinity of Warsaw, Data on the number of commuters come from the Central Statistical Office of Poland and cover the year 2011.

 

 Bibliography

Drejerska N., Chrzanowska M., 2014: Commuting in the Warsaw suburban area from a spatial perspective – an example of empirical research, Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Oeconomica 2014, Vol. 6, no 309, pp. 87-96.

 

Rouwendal J., Nijkamp P., 2004: Living in Two Worlds: A Review of Home-to-Work Decisions, Growth and Change, Volume 35, Issue 3, p. 287.

Tue, 07 May 2019
12:00
L4

Single-valued integration and superstring amplitudes

Clement Dupont
(Montpellier)
Abstract

The classical theory of integration concern integrals of differential forms over domains of integration. In geometric terms, this corresponds to a canonical pairing between de Rham cohomology and singular homology. For varieties defined over the reals, one can make use of complex conjugation to define a real-valued pairing between de Rham cohomology and its dual, de Rham homology. The corresponding theory of integration, that we call single-valued integration, pairs a differential form with a `dual differential form’. We will explain how single-valued periods are computed and give an application to superstring amplitudes in genus zero. This is joint work with Francis Brown.
 

Tue, 07 May 2019
11:45
C3

When Zeno met Pontryagin: a curious phenomenon in optimal control

Davin Lunz
((Oxford University))
Further Information

 

 
Abstract

I plan to present a brief introduction to optimal control theory (no background knowledge assumed), and discuss a fascinating and oft-forgotten family of problems where the optimal control behaves very strangely; it changes state infinitely often in finite time. This causes havoc in practice, and even more so in the literature.
 

Mon, 06 May 2019

16:00 - 17:00
L4

Hyperbolic hydrodynamic limit of a anharmonic chain under boundary tension

Stefano Marchesani
(Gran Sasso Science Institute GSSI)
Abstract

"We study the hydrodynamic limit for the isothermal dynamics of an anharmonic chain under hyperbolic space-time scaling under varying tension. The temperature is kept constant by a contact with a heat bath, realised via a stochastic momentum-preserving noise added to the dynamics. The noise is designed to be large at the microscopic level, but vanishing in the macroscopic scale. Boundary conditions are also considered: one end of the chain is kept fixed, while a time-varying tension is applied to the other end. We show that the volume stretch and momentum converge to a weak solution of the isothermal Euler equations in Lagrangian coordinates with boundary conditions."

Mon, 06 May 2019
15:45
L6

Holomorphic curves and Seiberg-Witten invariants for 4-dimensional cobordisms

Yi-Jen Lee
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Abstract

We will discuss a variant of Taubes’s Seiberg-Witten to Gromov theorem in the context of a 4-manifold with cylindrical ends, equipped with a nontrivial harmonic 2-form. This harmonic 2-form is allowed to be asymptotic to 0 on some (but not all) of its ends, and may have nondegenerate zeros along 1-submanifolds. Corollaries include various positivity results; some simple special cases of these constitute a key ingredient in Kutluhan-Lee-Taubes’s proof of HM = HF (Monopole Floer homology equals Heegaard Floer homology). The aforementioned general theorem is motivated by (potential) extensions of the HM = HF and Lee-Taubes’s HM = PFH (Periodic Floer homology) theorems.

Fri, 03 May 2019

16:00 - 17:00
L1

Dealing with journals, editors and referees

(University of Oxford)
Abstract


What actually happens when you submit an article to a journal? How does refereeing work in practice? How can you keep editors happy as an author or referee? How does one become a referee or editor? What does 'publication' mean with the internet and arXiv?

In this panel we'll discuss what happens between finishing writing a mathematical paper and its final (?) publication, looking at the various roles that people play and how they work best.

Featuring Helen Byrne, Rama Cont and Jonathan Pila.

 

Fri, 03 May 2019

15:00 - 16:00
N3.12

Persistence of Random Structures

Primoz Skraba
(Queen Mary University London)
Abstract

This talk will cover the connections of persistence with the topology of random structures. This includes an overview of various results from stochastic topology as well as the role persistence ideas  play in the analysis. This will include results on the maximally persistent classes and minimum spanning acycles/generalised trees.

Fri, 03 May 2019

14:00 - 15:00
L1

Mathematics: the past, present and future - "When Algebra met Topology"

Prof Ulrike Tillmann
Abstract

This year sees the 100th anniversary of Emmy Noether receiving her Habilitation and thus becoming the first women to be granted the right to teach and lecture at a university in Prussia (now Germany).  Noether shaped modern algebra and her influence was felt in many other fields including topology.


We will start by exploring what algebraic topology is, how the subject was shaped by algebra (under the influence of Noether), before considering some current challenges and applications.

Fri, 03 May 2019

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Biomechanics can provide a new perspective on microbiology

Professor Takuji Ishikawa
(Dept. Finemechanics Grad. Sch. Eng Tohoku University)
Abstract

Despite their tiny size, microorganisms play a huge role in many biological, medical, and engineering phenomena. For example, massive plankton blooms are an integral part of the oceanic ecosystem. Algal cells incorporate carbon dioxide, which affects global warming. In industry, microorganisms are used in bioreactors to produce food and medicines and to treat sewage. The human body hosts hundreds of microorganism species, and the number of microorganisms in the human body is roughly double the number of cells in the body. In the intestine, approximately 1 kg of enterobacteria form a unique ecosystem, called the gut flora, which plays important roles in digestion and in relation to infection. Because of the considerable influence that microorganisms have on human life, the study of their behavior and function is important.

Recent research has demonstrated the importance of biomechanics in understanding the behavior and functions of microorganisms. For example, red tides can be induced by the interplay between the background flow and swimming cells. A dense suspension of bacteria can generate a coherent structure, which strongly enhances mass transport in a suspension. These phenomena show that the physical environments around cells alter their behavior and biological functions. Such a biomechanical understanding is still lacking in microbiology, and we believe that biomechanics can provide new perspectives on future microbiology.

In this talk, we first introduce some of our studies of the behavior of individual swimming microorganisms near surfaces. We show that hydrodynamic forces can trap cells at liquid–air or liquid–solid interfaces. We then introduce interactions between a pair of swimming microorganisms, because a two-body interaction is the simplest many-body interaction. We show that our mathematical models can describe the interactions between two nearby swimming microorganisms. Collective motions formed by a group of swimming microorganisms are also introduced. We show that some collective motions of microorganisms, such as coherent structures of bacterial suspensions, can be understood in terms of fluid mechanics. We then discuss how cellular-level phenomena can change the rheological and diffusion properties of a suspension. The macroscopic properties of a suspension are strongly affected by mesoscale flow structures, which in turn are strongly affected by the interactions between cells. Hence, a bottom-up strategy, i.e., from a cellular level to a continuum suspension level, represents a natural approach to the study of a suspension of swimming microorganisms. Finally, we discuss whether our understanding of biological functions can be strengthened by the application of biomechanics, and how we can contribute to the future of microbiology.

Thu, 02 May 2019

16:00 - 17:00
L6

Arithmetic quantum chaos and small scale equidistribution

Peter Humphries
(UCL)
Abstract

Berry's random wave conjecture is a heuristic that the eigenfunctions of a classically ergodic system ought to display Gaussian random behaviour, as though they were random waves, in the large eigenvalue limit. We discuss two manifestations of this conjecture for eigenfunctions of the Laplacian on the modular surface: Planck scale mass equidistribution, and an asymptotic for the fourth moment. We will highlight how the resolution of these two problems in this number-theoretic setting involves a delicate understanding of the behaviour of certain families of L-functions.

Thu, 02 May 2019

16:00 - 17:30
L4

Equilibrium asset pricing with transaction costs

Johannes Muhle-Karbe
(Imperial College London)
Abstract


In the first part of the talk, we study risk-sharing equilibria where heterogenous agents trade subject to quadratic transaction costs. The corresponding equilibrium asset prices and trading strategies are characterised by a system of nonlinear, fully-coupled forward-backward stochastic differential equations. We show that a unique solution generally exists provided that the agents’ preferences are sufficiently similar. In a benchmark specification, the illiquidity discounts and liquidity premia observed empirically correspond to a positive relationship between transaction costs and volatility.
In the second part of the talk, we discuss how the model can be calibrated to time series of prices and the corresponding trading volume, and explain how extensions of the model with general transaction costs, for example, can be solved numerically using the deep learning approach of Han, Jentzen, and E (2018).
 (Based on joint works with Martin Herdegen and Dylan Possamai, as well as with Lukas Gonon and Xiaofei Shi)

 
Thu, 02 May 2019
16:00
C4

The Structure and Dimension of Multiplicative Preprojective Algebras

Daniel Kaplan
((Imperial College, London))
Abstract

Multiplicative preprojective algebras (MPAs) were originally defined by Crawley-Boevey and Shaw to encode solutions of the Deligne-Simpson problem as irreducible representations. 
MPAs have recently appeared in the literature from different perspectives including Fukaya categories of plumbed cotangent bundles (Etgü and Lekili) and, similarly, microlocal sheaves 
on rational curves (Bezrukavnikov and Kapronov.) After some motivation, I'll suggest a purely algebraic approach to study these algebras. Namely, I'll outline a proof that MPAs are 
2-Calabi-Yau if Q contains a cycle and an inductive argument to reduce to the case of the cycle itself.

Thu, 02 May 2019

16:00 - 17:30
L3

Cavitation and fracture in soft solids

Dr. Robert Style
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

Cracks in many soft solids behave very differently to the classical picture of fracture, where cracks are long and thin, with damage localised to a crack tip. In particular, small cracks in soft solids become highly rounded — almost circular — before they start to extend. However, despite being commonplace, this is still not well understood. We use a phase-separation technique in soft, stretched solids to controllably nucleate and grow small, nascent cracks. These give insight into the soft failure process. In particular, our results suggest fracture occurs in two regimes. When a crack is large, it obeys classical linear-elastic fracture mechanics, but when it is small it grows in a new, scale-free way at a constant driving stress.

Thu, 02 May 2019

13:00 - 14:00
L4

A class of stochastic games and moving free boundary problems

Renyuan Xu
(Berkeley)
Abstract

Stochastic control problems are closely related to free boundary problems, where both the underlying fully nonlinear PDEs and the boundaries separating the action and waiting regions are integral parts of the problems. In this talk, we will propose a class of stochastic N-player games and show how the free boundary problems involve moving boundaries due to the additional game nature. We will provide explicit Nash equilibria by solving a sequence of Skorokhod problems. For the special cases of resource allocation problems, we will show how players change their strategies based on different network structures between players and resources. We will also talk about the insights from a sharing economy perspective. This talk is based on a joint work with Xin Guo (UC Berkeley) and Wenpin Tang (UCLA).

Thu, 02 May 2019

12:00 - 13:00
L4

Lipschitz regularity for orthotropic p-harmonic functions

Chiara Leone
(Università di Napoli Frederico II)
Abstract

We present some regularity results for the gradient of solutions to very degenerate equations, which exhibit a great lack of ellipticity.
In particular we show that local weak solutions of the orthotropic p−harmonic equation are locally Lipschitz, for every $p\geq 2$ and in every dimension.
The results presented in this talk have been obtained in collaboration with Pierre Bousquet (Toulouse), Lorenzo Brasco (Ferrara) and Anna Verde (Napoli).
 

Thu, 02 May 2019
11:30

CANCELLED

Shuddhodan Kadattur Vasudevan
Further Information

The talk will be rescheduled to another time.  

Wed, 01 May 2019
16:00
C1

A Beginner's Guide to the Poincare Conjecture

Joseph Scull
(Oxford University)
Abstract


The Poincare Conjecture was first formulated over a century ago and states that there is only one closed simply connected 3-manifold, hinting at a link between 3-manifolds and their fundamental groups. This seemingly basic fact went unproven until the early 2000s when Perelman proved Thurston's much more powerful Geometrisation Conjecture, providing us with a powerful structure theorem for understanding all closed 3-manifolds.
In this talk I will introduce the results developed throughout the 20th century that lead to Thurston and Perelman's work. Then, using Geometrisation as a black box, I will present a proof of the Poincare Conjecture. Throughout we shall follow the crucial role that the fundamental group plays and hopefully demonstrate the geometric and group theoretical nature of much of the modern study of 3-manifolds.
As the title suggests, no prior understanding of 3-manifolds will be expected.
 

Wed, 01 May 2019
11:00
N3.12

The Kronecker-Weber theorem

Konstantinos Kartas
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

The Kronecker-Weber theorem states that every finite abelian extension of the rationals is contained in some cyclotomic field. I will present a proof that emphasizes the standard local-global philosophy by first proving it for the p-adics and then deducing the global case.

Tue, 30 Apr 2019

17:00 - 18:00
L1

Julia Wolf - The Power of Randomness

Julia Wolf
(University of Cambridge)
Further Information

Far from taking us down the road of unpredictability and chaos, randomness has the power to help us solve a fascinating range of problems. Join Julia Wolf on a mathematical journey from penalty shoot-outs to internet security and patterns in the primes. 

Julia Wolf is University Lecturer in the Department of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics at the University of Cambridge.

5-6pm
Mathematical Institute
Oxford

Please email @email to register.

Watch live:
https://www.facebook.com/OxfordMathematics
https://livestream.com/oxuni/wolf

The Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures are generously supported by XTX Markets.