Mon, 22 Feb 2010
15:45
Eagle House

Rough Paths and PDEs

Massimiliano Gubinelli
(Paris, Dauphine)
Abstract

By means of a series of examples (Korteweg-de Vries equation, non-

linear stochastic heat equations and Navier-Stokes equation) we will show how it is possible to apply rough path ideas in the study of the Cauchy problem for PDEs with and without stochastic terms.

Mon, 22 Feb 2010
14:15
Eagle House

Signaling Game: A general Micro-Level Model

Yi Lei Hu
(University of Paris VI, France)
Abstract

We study a generalized version of the signaling processoriginally introduced and studied by Argiento, Pemantle, Skyrms and Volkov(2009), which models how two interacting agents learn to signal each other andthus create a common language.

We show that the process asymptotically leads to the emergence of a graph ofconnections between signals and states which has the property that nosignal-state correspondance could be associated both to a synonym and aninformational bottleneck.

Mon, 22 Feb 2010

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Generalized scaling and integrability from AdS5 x S5

Riccardo Ricci
(Imperial College)
Abstract
According to AdS/CFT a remarkable correspondence exists between strings in AdS5 x S5 and operators in N=4 SYM. A particularly important case is that of fast-spinning folded closed strings and the so called twist-operators in the gauge theory. This is a remarkable tool for uncovering and checking the detailed structure of the AdS/CFT correspondence and its integrability properties. In this talk I will show how to match the expression of the anomalous dimension of twist operators as computed from the quantum superstring with the result obtained from the Bethe ansatz of SYM. This agreement resolves a long-standing disagreement between gauge and string sides of the AdS/CFT duality and provides a highly nontrivial strong coupling test of SYM integrability.
Fri, 19 Feb 2010

10:00 - 11:15
DH 1st floor SR

Using ordinary differential equation models to represent fire and temperature dynamics from palaeoecological data

Elizabeth Jeffers
(Oxford Centre for the Environment)
Abstract

I have reconstructed multiple palaeoecological records from sites across the British Isles; this work has resulted in detailed time series that demonstrate changes in vegetation, herbivore density, nitrogen cycling, fire levels and air temperature across an 8,000 year time span covering the end of the last glacial period. The aim of my research is to use statistics to infer the relationships between vegetation changes and changes in the abiotic and biotic environment in which they occurred. This aim is achieved by using a model-fitting and model-selection method whereby sets of ordinary differential equations (ODE) are ‘fitted’ to the time series data via maximum likelihood estimation in order to find the model(s) that provide the closest match to the data. Many of the differential equation models that I have used in this study are well established in the theoretical ecology literature (i.e. plant – resource dynamics and plant – herbivore dynamics); however, there are no existing ODE models of fire or temperature dynamics that were appropriate for my data. For this workshop, I will present the palaeoecological data that I collected along with the models that I have chosen to work with (including my first attempt at models for fire and temperature dynamics) and I hope to get your feedback on these models and suggestions for other useful modelling methods that could be used to represent these dynamics.

Thu, 18 Feb 2010
17:00
L3

Compact Apporximations and Topological Complexity of definable Sets

Nicolai Vorobjov
(Bath)
Abstract

We study upper bounds on topological complexity of sets definable in o-minimal structures over the reals. We suggest a new construction for approximating a large class of definable sets, including the sets defined by arbitrary Boolean combinations of equations and inequalities, by compact sets.

Those compact sets bound from above the homotopies and homologies of the approximated sets.

The construction is applicable to images under definable maps.

Based on this construction we refine the previously known upper bounds on Betti numbers of semialgebraic and semi-Pfaffian sets defined by quantifier-free formulae, and prove similar new upper bounds, individual for different Betti numbers, for their images under arbitrary continuous definable maps.

Joint work with A. Gabrielov.

Thu, 18 Feb 2010

16:30 - 17:30
DH 1st floor SR

Morphoelasticity, viscoelasticity and the evolution of strain

Cameron Hall (OCCAM)
Abstract

If an ideal elastic spring is greatly stretched, it will develop large stresses. However, solid biological tissues are able to grow without developing such large stresses. This is because the cells within such tissues are able to lay down new fibres and remove old ones, fundamentally changing the mechanical structure of the tissue. In many ways, this is analogous to classical plasticity, where materials stretched beyond their yield point begin to flow and the unloaded state of the material changes. Unfortunately, biological tissues are not closed systems and so we are not able to use standard plasticity techniques where we require the flow to be mass conserving and energetically passive.

In this talk, a general framework will be presented for modelling the changing zero stress state of a biological tissue (or any other material). Working from the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient, we show that the rate of 'desired' growth can represented using a tensor that describes both the total rate of growth and any directional biases. This can be used to give an evolution equation for the effective strain (a measure of the difference between the current state and the zero stress state). We conclude by looking at a perhaps surprising application for this theory as a method for deriving the constitutive laws of a viscoelastic fluid.

Thu, 18 Feb 2010

14:00 - 15:00
3WS SR

Saddle point problems in liquid crystal modelling

Dr. Alison Ramage
(University of Strathclyde)
Abstract

Saddle-point problems occur frequently in liquid crystal modelling. For example, they arise whenever Lagrange multipliers are used for the pointwise-unit-vector constraints in director modelling, or in both general director and order tensor models when an electric field is present that stems from a constant voltage. Furthermore, in a director model with associated constraints and Lagrange multipliers, together with a coupled electric-field interaction, a particular ''double'' saddle-point structure arises. This talk will focus on a simple example of this type and discuss appropriate numerical solution schemes.

This is joint work with Eugene C. Gartland, Jr., Department of Mathematical Sciences, Kent State University.

Thu, 18 Feb 2010 12:00 -
Thu, 18 Mar 2010 13:00
SR1

Monodromy of Higgs bundles

Laura Schaposnik
(Oxford)
Abstract

We will consider the monodromy action on mod 2 cohomology for SL(2) Hitchin systems. We will study Copeland's approach to the subject and use his results to compute the monodromy action on mod 2 cohomology. An interpretation of our results in terms of geometric properties of fixed points of a natural involution on the moduli space is given.

Thu, 18 Feb 2010
11:00
DH 3rd floor SR

Submarine Hunting and Other Applications of the Mathematics of Tracking. (NOTE Change of speaker and topic)

Trevor Wood
(Oxford)
Abstract

The background for the multitarget tracking problem is presented

along with a new framework for solution using the theory of random

finite sets. A range of applications are presented including

submarine tracking with active SONAR, classifying underwater entities

from audio signals and extracting cell trajectories from biological

data.

Wed, 17 Feb 2010

11:30 - 12:30
ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2

$\pi$

George Wellen
(Bradfield College)
Tue, 16 Feb 2010

17:00 - 18:00
L2

Monstrous moonshine and black holes

John Duncan
(Cambridge)
Abstract

\ \ In 1939 Rademacher derived a conditionally convergent series expression for the modular j-invariant, and used this expression---the first Rademacher sum---to verify its modular invariance. We may attach Rademacher sums to other discrete groups of isometries of the hyperbolic plane, and we may ask how the automorphy of the resulting functions reflects the geometry of the group in question.

\\

\ \ In the case of a group that defines a genus zero quotient of the hyperbolic plane the relationship is particularly striking. On the other hand, of the common features of the groups that arise in monstrous moonshine, the genus zero property is perhaps the most elusive. We will illustrate how Rademacher sums elucidate this phenomena by using them to formulate a characterization of the discrete groups of monstrous moonshine.

\\

\ \ A physical interpretation of the Rademacher sums comes into view when we consider black holes in the context of three dimensional quantum gravity. This observation, together with the application of Rademacher sums to moonshine, amounts to a new connection between moonshine, number theory and physics, and furnishes applications in all three fields.

Tue, 16 Feb 2010

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Moduli Spaces of Sheaves on Toric Varieties

Martijn Kool
(Oxford)
Abstract

Extending work of Klyachko, we give a combinatorial description of pure equivariant sheaves on a nonsingular projective toric variety X and use this description to construct moduli spaces of such sheaves. These moduli spaces are explicit and combinatorial in nature. Subsequently, we consider the moduli space M of all Gieseker stable sheaves on X and describe its fixed point locus in terms of the moduli spaces of pure equivariant sheaves on X. As an application, we compute generating functions of Euler characteristics of M in case X is a toric surface. In the torsion free case, one finds examples of new as well as known generating functions. In the pure dimension 1 case using a conjecture of Sheldon Katz, one obtains examples of genus zero Gopakumar-Vafa invariants of the canonical bundle of X.

Tue, 16 Feb 2010

14:30 - 15:30
L3

Boundary properties of graphs

Vadim Lozin
(Warwick)
Abstract

The notion of a boundary graph property is a relaxation of that of a

minimal property. Several fundamental results in graph theory have been obtained in

terms of identifying minimal properties. For instance, Robertson and Seymour showed that

there is a unique minimal minor-closed property with unbounded tree-width (the planar

graphs), while Balogh, Bollobás and Weinreich identified nine minimal hereditary

properties of labeled graphs with the factorial speed of growth. However, there are

situations where the notion of minimal property is not applicable. A typical example of this type

is given by graphs of large girth. It is known that for each particular value of k, the

graphs of girth at least k are of unbounded tree-width and their speed of growth is

superfactorial, while the limit property of this sequence (i.e., the acyclic graphs) has bounded

tree-width and its speed of growth is factorial. To overcome this difficulty, the notion of

boundary properties of graphs has been recently introduced. In the present talk, we use this

notion in order to identify some classes of graphs which are well-quasi-ordered with

respect to the induced subgraph relation.

Mon, 15 Feb 2010 17:00 -
Mon, 15 Mar 2010 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Regularity results for functionals with general growth

Bianca Stroffolini
(University of Naples)
Abstract
In this talk I will present some results on functionals with general growth, obtained in collaboration with L. Diening and A. Verde.

Let $\phi$ be a convex, $C^1$-function and consider the functional: $$ (1)\qquad \mathcal{F}(\bf u)=\int_{\Omega} \phi (|\nabla \bf u|) \,dx $$ where $\Omega\subset \mathbb{R}^n$ is a bounded open set and $\bf u: \Omega \to \mathbb{R}^N$. The associated Euler Lagrange system is $$ -\mbox{div} (\phi' (|\nabla\bf u|)\frac{\nabla\bf u}{|\nabla\bf u|} )=0 $$ In a fundamental paper K.~Uhlenbeck proved everywhere $C^{1,\alpha}$-regularity for local minimizers of the $p$-growth functional with $p\ge 2$. Later on a large number of generalizations have been made. The case $1

{\bf Theorem.} Let $\bfu\in W^{1,\phi}_{\loc}(\Omega)$ be a local minimizer of (1), where $\phi$ satisfies suitable assumptions. Then $\bfV(\nabla \bfu)$ and $\nabla \bfu$ are locally $\alpha$-Hölder continuous for some $\alpha>0$.

We present a unified approach to the superquadratic and subquadratic $p$-growth, also considering more general functions than the powers. As an application, we prove Lipschitz regularity for local minimizers of asymptotically convex functionals in a $C^2$ sense.