Fri, 11 Dec 2009

11:30 - 13:00
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

OCCAM group meeting

Ellis, Reis and Zygalakis
(Oxford)
Abstract

• “Two Problems Relating to Sand Dune Formation” by Andrew Ellis

• “Interface Sharpening with a Lattice Boltzmann Equation” by Tim Reis

• “A Dual Porosity Model for the Uptake of Nutrients by Root Hairs” by Kostas Zygalakis

Fri, 11 Dec 2009

10:00 - 11:15
DH 1st floor SR

Atomistic Computer simulation of Novel Materials

Mark Wilson
(Theoretical Chemistry, Oxford)
Abstract

Atomistic computer simulation models are constructed to study a range of materials in which

the atoms appear in novel environments. Two key research areas are considered:

• The Growth and Structure Inorganic Nanotubes. A range of materials have been

observed to form nanotubular structures (inorganic nanotubes - INTs) analogous to those

well known for carbon. These INTs, which may have unique low-dimensional morphologies

not simply related to known bulk polymorphs, potentially offer unique mechanical and electronic properties. A useful synthetic pathway is to use carbon nanotubes as templates using

molten salts. Atomistic simulation models, in which the atom interactions are treated utilizing relatively simple potential energy functions, are developed and applied to understand

the INT formation and stability. INT morphologies are classified by reference to folding

two dimensional sheets. The respective roles of thermodynamics and kinetics in determining

INT morphology are outlined and the atomistic results used to develop an analytic model to

predict INT diameters.

• Ordering on Multiple Length-Scales in Network-forming Liquids. Intermediate-range order (IRO), in which systems exhibit structural ordering on length-scales beyond

the nearest-neighbour (short-range), has been identified in a wide range of materials and is

characterised by the appearance of the so-called first sharp diffraction peak (FSDP) at low

scattering angles. The precise structural origin of such ordering remains contentious and a full

understanding of the factors underlying this order is vital if such materials (many of which are

technologically significant) are to be produced in a controlled manner. Simulation models,

in which the ion-ion interactions are represented by relatively simple potential functions

which incorporate (many-body) polarisation and which are parameterised by reference to

well-directed electronic structure calculations, have been shown to reproduce such IRO and

allow the precise structural origin of the IRO to be identified. Furthermore, the use of

relatively simple (and hence computationally tractable) models allows for the study of the

relatively long length- and time-scales required. The underlying structures are analysed with

reference to both recent (neutron scattering) experimental results and high level electronic

structure calculations. The role of key structural units (corner and edge sharing polyhedra)

in determining the network topology is investigated in terms of the underlying dynamics and

the relationship to the glass transition considered.

Thu, 10 Dec 2009

12:00 - 13:00
SR1

Right inverses of the Kirwan map

Andratx Bellmunt
(Universitat de Barcelona / Oxford)
Abstract

We will begin by reviewing the construction of the symplectic quotient and the definition of the Kirwan map. Then we will give an overview of Kirwan's original proof of the surjectivity of this map and some generalizations of this result. Finally we will talk about the techniques that are being developed to construct right inverses for the Kirwan map.

Thu, 10 Dec 2009

12:00 - 13:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

OxMOS Team Meeting

Christoph Ortner; Cameron Hall
Mon, 07 Dec 2009 09:00 -
Tue, 08 Dec 2009 17:00
L2

Workshop on Atomistic Models of Solids

Speaker names are listed below.
(Oxford)
Abstract

Speakers include:

* Graeme Ackland (School of Physics and Astronomy, Edinburgh) * Andrea Braides (Rome II) * Thierry Bodineau (École Normale Supérieure, Paris) * Matthew Dobson (Minneapolis) * Laurent Dupuy (CEA, Saclay) * Ryan Elliott (Minneapolis) * Roman Kotecky (Warwick) * Carlos Mora-Corral (BCAM, Bilbao) * Stefano Olla (CEREMADE, Paris-Dauphine) * Bernd Schmidt (TU Munich) * Lev Truskinovsky (École Polytechnique, Palaiseau) * Min Zhou (Georgia Tech, Atlanta)

Fri, 04 Dec 2009 16:30 -
Sat, 05 Dec 2009 17:00
DH 3rd floor SR

Clustering recipes: new flavours of kernel and spectral methods

Ornella Cominetti
(University of Oxford)
Abstract
Soft (fuzzy) clustering techniques are often used in the study of high-dimensional datasets, such as microarray and other high-throughput bioinformatics data. The most widely used method is Fuzzy C-means algorithm (FCM), but it can present difficulties when dealing with nonlinear clusters. In this talk, we will overview and compare different clustering methods. We will introduce DifFUZZY, a novel spectral fuzzy clustering algorithm applicable to a larger class of clustering problems than FCM. This method is better at handling datasets that are curved, elongated or those which contain clusters of different dispersion. We will present examples of datasets (synthetic and real) for which this method outperforms other frequently used algorithms
Fri, 04 Dec 2009
14:15
Eagle House

Robust utility maximization from terminal wealth and consumption considering a model with jumps : BSDE approach

Anis Matoussi
(Le Mans)
Abstract

We study a stochastic control problem in the context of utility maximization under model uncertainty. The problem is formulated as /max min/ problem : /max /over strategies and consumption and /min/ over the set of models (measures).

For the minimization problem, we have showed in Bordigoni G., Matoussi,A., Schweizer, M. (2007) that there exists a unique optimal measure equivalent to the reference measure. Moreover, in the context of continuous filtration, we characterize the dynamic value process of our stochastic control problem as the unique solution of a generalized backward stochastic differential equation with a quadratic driver. We extend first this result in a discontinuous filtration. Moreover, we obtain a comparison theorem and a regularity properties for the associated generalized BSDE with jumps, which are the key points in our approach, in order to solve the utility maximization problem over terminal wealth and consumption. The talk is based on joint work with M. Jeanblanc and A. Ngoupeyou (2009).

Thu, 03 Dec 2009

16:30 - 17:30
OCCAM Common Room (RI2.28)

Computational Surface Partial Differential Equations

Charlie Elliott
(Warwick University)
Abstract

Evolutionary PDEs on stationary and moving surfaces appear in many applications such as the diffusion of surfactants on fluid interfaces, surface pattern formation on growing domains, segmentation on curved surfaces and phase separation on biomembranes and dissolving alloy surfaces.

In this talk I discuss three numerical approaches based on:- (I) Surface Finite Elements and Triangulated Surfaces, (II)Level Set Method and Implicit Surface PDEs and (III) Phase Field Approaches and Diffuse Surfaces.

Thu, 03 Dec 2009

14:00 - 15:00
3WS SR

Rational Approximations to the Complex Error Function

Prof. Andre Weideman
(University of Stellenbosch)
Abstract

We consider rational approximations to the Faddeeva or plasma dispersion function, defined

as

$w(z) = e^{-z^{2}} \mbox{erfc} (-iz)$.

With many important applications in physics, good software for

computing the function reliably everywhere in the complex plane is required. In this talk

we shall derive rational approximations to $w(z)$ via quadrature, M\"{o}bius transformations, and best approximation. The various approximations are compared with regard to speed of convergence, numerical stability, and ease of generation of the coefficients of the formula.

In addition, we give preference to methods for which a single expression yields uniformly

high accuracy in the entire complex plane, as well as being able to reproduce exactly the

asymptotic behaviour

$w(z) \sim i/(\sqrt{\pi} z), z \rightarrow \infty$

(in an appropriate sector).

This is Joint work with: Stephan Gessner, St\'efan van der Walt

Thu, 03 Dec 2009

12:00 - 13:00
SR1

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 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. Using torus localisation, one can then compute topological invariants of M. We consider the case X=S is a toric surface and compute generating functions of Euler characteristics of M. In case of torsion free sheaves, one can study wall-crossing phenomena and in case of pure dimension 1 sheaves one can verify, in examples, a conjecture of Katz relating Donaldson--Thomas invariants and Gopakumar--Vafa invariants.

Wed, 02 Dec 2009

11:30 - 12:30
ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2

Generalized Gelfand--Graev representations for finite groups of Lie type

Matthew Clarke
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

This talk is about the ordinary representation theory of finite groups of Lie type. I will begin by carefully reviewing algebraic groups and finite groups of Lie type and the construction and properties of (ordinary) Gelfand--Graev characters. I will then introduce generalized Gelfand--Graev characters, which are constructed using the Lie algebra of the ambient algebraic group. Towards the end I hope to give an idea of how generalized Gelfand--Graev characters can and have been used to attack Lusztig's conjecture and the role this plays in the determination of the character tables of finite groups of Lie type.

Tue, 01 Dec 2009

15:00 - 16:00
Imperial College

(HoRSe seminar at Imperial College) Moduli of Calabi-Yau 3-folds and instantons on $G_2$ manifolds

Simon Donaldson
(Imperial College London)
Abstract

This talk will be largely speculative. First we consider the formal properties that could be expected of a "topological field theory" in 6+1 dimensions defined by $G_2$ instantons. We explain that this could lead to holomorphic bundles over moduli spaces of Calabi-Yau 3-folds whose ranks are the DT-invariants. We also discuss in more detail the compactness problem for $G_2$ instantons and associative submanifolds.

The talk will be held in Room 408, Imperial College Maths Department, Huxley Building, 180 Queen’s Gate, London.

Tue, 01 Dec 2009

13:30 - 14:30
Imperial College

(HoRSe seminar at Imperial college) Gauge theory and exceptional holonomy

Simon Donaldson
(Imperial College London)
Abstract

This talk will review material, well-known to specialists, on calibrated geometry and Yang-Mills theory over manifolds with holonomy $SU(3)$, $G_2$ or $Spin(7)$. We will also describe extensions of the standard set-up, modelled on Gromov's "taming forms" for almost-complex structures.

The talk will be held in Room 408, Imperial College Maths Department, Huxley Building, 180 Queen’s Gate, London.

Tue, 01 Dec 2009
12:00
L3

On the classification of extremal black holes

James Lucietti
(Imperial)
Abstract

Extremal black holes are of interest as they are expected have simpler quantum descriptions than their non-extremal counterparts.  Any extremal black hole solution admits a well defined notion of a near horizon geometry which solves the same field equations. I will describe recent progress on the general understanding of such near horizon geometries in four and higher dimensions. This will include the proof of near-horizon symmetry enhancement and the explicit classification of near-horizon geometries (in a variety of settings). I will also discuss how one can use such results to prove classification/uniqueness theorems for asymptotically flat extremal vacuum black holes in four and five dimensions.