Wed, 30 Nov 2011

16:00 - 17:00
SR2

Classical and Cubical Small Cancellation Theory

David Hume
Abstract

Building on the previous talk, we continue the exploration of techniques required to understand Wise's results. We present an overview of classical small cancellation theory running in parallel with the newer one for cubical complexes.

Wed, 30 Nov 2011

16:00 - 17:30
L3

Interlaced Lattices

Umberto Rivieccio
(University of Birmingham)
Abstract

I will give an overview of some of the most interesting algebraic-lattice theoretical results on bilattices. I will focus in particular on the product construction that is used to represent a subclass of bilattices, the so-called 'interlaced bilattices', mentioning some alternative strategies to prove such a result. If time allows, I will discuss other algebras of logic related to bilattices (e.g., Nelson lattices) and their product representation.

Tue, 29 Nov 2011
17:00
L2

tba

Tue, 29 Nov 2011
15:00
SR2

tba

Tue, 29 Nov 2011
13:15
DH 3rd floor SR

Turbidity current dynamics - modelling sediment avalanches in the ocean

Gemma Fay
(Oxford Centre for Industrial and Applied Mathematics)
Abstract

Turbidity currents are fast-moving streams of sediment in the ocean 
which have the power to erode the sea floor and damage man-made
infrastructure anchored to the bed. They can travel for hundreds of
kilometres from the continental shelf to the deep ocean, but they are
unpredictable and can occur randomly without much warning making them
hard to observe and measure. Our main aim is to determine the distance
downstream at which the current will become extinct. We consider the
fluid model of Parker et al. [1986] and derive a simple shallow-water
description of the current which we examine numerically and analytically
to identify supercritical and subcritical flow regimes. We then focus on
the solution of the complete model and provide a new description of the
turbulent kinetic energy. This extension of the model involves switching
from a turbulent to laminar flow regime and provides an improved
description of the extinction process. 

Tue, 29 Nov 2011

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Quantum Field Theory: Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?

Nazim Bouatta (DAMTP)
Abstract

In recent decades, quantum field theory (QFT) has become the framework for

several basic and outstandingly successful physical theories. Indeed, it has

become the lingua franca of entire branches of physics and even mathematics.

The universal scope of QFT opens fascinating opportunities for philosophy.

Accordingly, although the philosophy of physics has been dominated by the

analysis of quantum mechanics, relativity and thermo-statistical physics,

several philosophers have recently undertaken conceptual analyses of QFT.

One common feature of these analyses is the emphasis on rigorous approaches,

such as algebraic and constructive QFT; as against the more heuristic and

physical formulations of QFT in terms of functional (also knows as: path)

integrals.

However, I will follow the example of some recent mathematicians such as

Atiyah, Connes and Kontsevich, who have adopted a remarkable pragmatism and

opportunism with regard to heuristic QFT, not corseted by rigor (as Connes

remarks). I will conceptually discuss the advances that have marked

heuristic QFT, by analysing some of the key ideas that accompanied its

development.  I will also discuss the interactions between these concepts in

the various relevant fields, such as particle physics, statistical

mechanics, gravity and geometry. 

Mon, 28 Nov 2011

17:00 - 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Homogenisation in finite elasticity for composites with a high contrast in the vicinity of rigid-body motions

Kirill Cherednichenko
(Cardiff University)
Abstract

I will describe a multiscale asymptotic framework for the analysis of the macroscopic behaviour of periodic

two-material composites with high contrast in a finite-strain setting. I will start by introducing the nonlinear

description of a composite consisting of a stiff material matrix and soft, periodically distributed inclusions. I shall then focus

on the loading regimes when the applied load is small or of order one in terms of the period of the composite structure.

I will show that this corresponds to the situation when the displacements on the stiff component are situated in the vicinity

of a rigid-body motion. This allows to replace, in the homogenisation limit, the nonlinear material law of the stiff component

by its linearised version. As a main result, I derive (rigorously in the spirit of $\Gamma$-convergence) a limit functional

that allows to establish a precise two-scale expansion for minimising sequences. This is joint work with M. Cherdantsev and

S. Neukamm.

Mon, 28 Nov 2011

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Ziggurats and rotation numbers

Danny Calegari
(Cambridge)
Abstract

I will discuss new rigidity and rationality phenomena

(related to the phenomenon of Arnold tongues) in the theory of

nonabelian group actions on the circle. I will introduce tools that

can translate questions about the existence of actions with prescribed

dynamics, into finite combinatorial questions that can be answered

effectively. There are connections with the theory of Diophantine

approximation, and with the bounded cohomology of free groups. A

special case of this theory gives a very short new proof of Naimi’s

theorem (i.e. the conjecture of Jankins-Neumann) which was the last

step in the classification of taut foliations of Seifert fibered

spaces. This is joint work with Alden Walker.

Mon, 28 Nov 2011
15:45
Oxford-Man Institute

Constructive quantization: approximation by empirical measures

Steffen Dereich
(Marburg University)
Abstract

The notion quantization originates from information theory, where it refers to the approximation of a continuous signal on a discrete set. Our research on quantization is mainly motivated by applications in quadrature problems. In that context, one aims at finding for a given probability measure $\mu$ on a metric space a discrete approximation that is supported on a finite number of points, say $N$, and is close to $\mu$ in a Wasserstein metric.

In general it is a hard problem to find close to optimal quantizations, if  $N$ is large and/or  $\mu$ is given implicitly, e.g. being the marginal distribution of a stochastic differential equation. In this talk we analyse the efficiency of empirical measures in the constructive quantization problem. That means the random approximating measure is the uniform distribution on $N$ independent $\mu$-distributed elements.

We show that this approach is order order optimal in many cases. Further, we give fine asymptotic estimates for the quantization error that involve moments of the density of the absolutely continuous part of $\mu$, so called high resolution formulas. The talk ends with an outlook on possible applications and open problems.

The talk is based on joint work with Michael Scheutzow (TU Berlin) and Reik Schottstedt (U Marburg).

Mon, 28 Nov 2011

14:15 - 15:15
L3

Fission varieties

Philip Boalch
(ENS Paris)
Abstract

I'll recall the quasi-Hamiltonian approach to moduli spaces of flat connections on Riemann surfaces, as a nice finite dimensional algebraic version of operations with loop groups such as fusion. Recently, whilst extending this approach to meromorphic connections, a new operation arose, which we will call "fission". As will be explained, this operation enables the construction of many new algebraic symplectic manifolds, going beyond those we were trying to construct.

Mon, 28 Nov 2011
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Metastability of supercritical zero range processes on a finite set

Claudio Landim
Abstract

We present some recent results on the metastability of continuous time Markov chains on finite sets using potential theory. This approach is applied to the case of supercritical zero range processes.

Mon, 28 Nov 2011

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Emergent IR CFTs in black hole physics

Joan Simon
(University of Edinburgh)
Abstract

I will discuss the dynamical emergence of IR conformal invariance describing the low energy excitations of near-extremal R-charged global AdS${}_5$ black holes. To keep some non-trivial dynamics in the sector of ${\cal N}=4$ SYM captured by the near horizon limits describing these IR physics, we are lead to study large N limits in the UV theory involving near vanishing horizon black holes. I will consider both near-BPS and non-BPS regimes, emphasising the differences in the local AdS${}_3$ throats emerging in both cases. I will compare these results with the predictions obtained by Kerr/CFT, obtaining a natural quantisation for the central charge of the near-BPS emergent IR CFT describing the open strings stretched between giant gravitons.

Fri, 25 Nov 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Optimal discretization of hedging strategies with jumps

Mathieu Rosenbaum
(University Paris 6)
Abstract

In this work, we consider the hedging error due to discrete trading in models with jumps. We propose a framework enabling to

(asymptotically) optimize the discretization times. More precisely, a strategy is said to be optimal if for a given cost function, no strategy has

(asymptotically) a lower mean square error for a smaller cost. We focus on strategies based on hitting times and give explicit expressions for

the optimal strategies. This is joint work with Peter Tankov.

Thu, 24 Nov 2011

16:00 - 17:00
DH 1st floor SR

Coupled problem of dam-break flow

Alexander Korobkin
(UEA)
Abstract

Initial stage of the flow with a free surface generated by a vertical

wall moving from a liquid of finite depth in a gravitational field is

studied. The liquid is inviscid and incompressible, and its flow is

irrotational. Initially the liquid is at rest. The wall starts to move

from the liquid with a constant acceleration.

It is shown that, if the acceleration of the plate is small, then the

liquid free surface separates from the wall only along an

exponentially small interval. The interval on the wall, along which

the free surface instantly separates for moderate acceleration of the

wall, is determined by using the condition that the displacements of

liquid particles are finite. During the initial stage the original

problem of hydrodynamics is reduced to a mixed boundary-value problem

with respect to the velocity field with unknown in advance position of

the separation point. The solution of this

problem is derived in terms of complete elliptic integrals. The

initial shape of the separated free surface is calculated and compared

with that predicted by the small-time solution of the dam break

problem. It is shown that the free surface at the separation point is

orthogonal to the moving plate.

Initial acceleration of a dam, which is suddenly released, is calculated.

Thu, 24 Nov 2011

15:00 - 17:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Lectures on: Bifurcation Theory and Applications to Elliptic Boundary-Value Problems

Professor Charles A Stuart
Abstract

• Bifurcation from isolated eigenvalues of finite multiplicity of the linearisation.

• Pseudo-inverses and parametrices for paths of Fredholm operators of index zero.

• Detecting a change of orientation along such a path.

• Lyapunov-Schmidt reduction

Thu, 24 Nov 2011

14:00 - 15:30
L3

Learning from two-dimensional number theory: representation theory aspects

Ivan Fesenko
(University of Nottingham)
Abstract

I will discuss some of new concepts and objects of two-dimensional number theory: 

how the same object can be studied via low dimensional noncommutative theories or higher dimensional commutative ones, 

what is higher Haar measure and harmonic analysis and how they can be used in representation theory of non locally compact groups such as loop groups and Kac-Moody groups, 

how classical notions split into two different notions on surfaces on the example of adelic structures, 

what is the analogue of the double quotient of adeles on surfaces and how one

could approach automorphic functions in geometric dimension two.

Thu, 24 Nov 2011

14:00 - 15:00
Gibson Grd floor SR

Energy-law preserving continuous finite element methods for simulation of liquid crystal and multi-phase flows

Prof Ping Lin
(University of Dundee)
Abstract

The liquid crystal (LC) flow model is a coupling between

orientation (director field) of LC molecules and a flow field.

The model may probably be one of simplest complex fluids and

is very similar to a Allen-Cahn phase field model for

multiphase flows if the orientation variable is replaced by a

phase function. There are a few large or small parameters

involved in the model (e.g. the small penalty parameter for

the unit length LC molecule or the small phase-change

parameter, possibly large Reynolds number of the flow field,

etc.). We propose a C^0 finite element formulation in space

and a modified midpoint scheme in time which accurately

preserves the inherent energy law of the model. We use C^0

elements because they are simpler than existing C^1 element

and mixed element methods. We emphasise the energy law

preservation because from the PDE analysis point of view the

energy law is very important to correctly catch the evolution

of singularities in the LC molecule orientation. In addition

we will see numerical examples that the energy law preserving

scheme performs better under some choices of parameters. We

shall apply the same idea to a Cahn-Hilliard phase field model

where the biharmonic operator is decomposed into two Laplacian

operators. But we find that under our scheme non-physical

oscillation near the interface occurs. We figure out the

reason from the viewpoint of differential algebraic equations

and then remove the non-physical oscillation by doing only one

step of a modified backward Euler scheme at the initial time.

A number of numerical examples demonstrate the good

performance of the method. At the end of the talk we will show

how to apply the method to compute a superconductivity model,

especially at the regime of Hc2 or beyond. The talk is based

on a few joint papers with Chun Liu, Qi Wang, Xingbin Pan and

Roland Glowinski, etc.