Tue, 24 Feb 2015

14:00 - 14:30
L5

A hybrid numerical-asymptotic boundary element method for scattering by penetrable obstacles

Samuel Groth
(University of Reading)
Abstract

When high-frequency acoustic or electromagnetic waves are incident upon an obstacle, the resulting scattered field is composed of rapidly oscillating waves. Conventional numerical methods for such problems use piecewise-polynomial approximation spaces which are not well-suited to capture the oscillatory solution. Hence these methods are prohibitively expensive in the high-frequency regime. Much work has been done in developing “hybrid numerical-asymptotic” (HNA) boundary element methods which utilise approximation spaces containing oscillatory functions carefully chosen to capture the high-frequency asymptotic behaviour of the solution. The computational cost of this approach is significantly smaller than that of conventional methods, and for many problems it is independent of the frequency. In this talk, I will outline the HNA method and discuss its extension to scattering by penetrable obstacles.​

Tue, 24 Feb 2015
12:30
Oxford-Man Institute

Measuring and predicting human behaviour using online data

Tobias Preis
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

In this talk, I will outline some recent highlights of our research, addressing two questions. Firstly, can big data resources provide insights into crises in financial markets? By analysing Google query volumes for search terms related to finance and views of Wikipedia articles, we find patterns which may be interpreted as early warning signs of stock market moves. Secondly, can we provide insight into international differences in economic wellbeing by comparing patterns of interaction with the Internet? To answer this question, we introduce a future-orientation index to quantify the degree to which Internet users seek more information about years in the future than years in the past. We analyse Google logs and find a striking correlation between the country's GDP and the predisposition of its inhabitants to look forward. Our results illustrate the potential that combining extensive behavioural data sets offers for a better understanding of large scale human economic behaviour.

Tue, 24 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:00
L5

Curved-space supersymmetry and Omega-background for 2d N=(2,2) theories, localization and vortices.

Cyril Closset
(Stonybrook)
Abstract

I will present a systematic approach to two-dimensional N=(2,2) supersymmetric gauge theories in curved space, with a particular focus on the two-dimensional Omega deformation. I will explain how to compute Omega-deformed A-type topological correlation functions in purely field theoretic terms (i.e. without relying on a target-space picture), improving on previous techniques. The resulting general formula simplifies previous results in the Abelian (toric) case, while it leads to new results for non-Abelian GLSMs.

Tue, 24 Feb 2015

11:00 - 12:30
C5

Embedology for Control and Random Dynamical Systems in Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Spaces

Visiting Professor Boumediene Hamzi
(Koç University Istanbul)
Abstract

Abstract: We introduce a data-based approach to estimating key quantities which arise in the study of nonlinear control and random dynamical systems. Our approach hinges on the observation that much of the existing linear theory may be readily extended to nonlinear systems -with a reasonable expectation of success - once the nonlinear system has been mapped into a high or infinite dimensional Reproducing Kernel Hilbert Space. In particular, we develop computable, non-parametric estimators approximating controllability and observability energy/Lyapunov functions for nonlinear systems, and study the ellipsoids they induce. It is then shown that the controllability energy estimator provides a key means for approximating the invariant measure of an ergodic, stochastically forced nonlinear system. We also apply this approach to the problem of model reduction of nonlinear control systems.

In all cases the relevant quantities are estimated from simulated or observed data. These results collectively argue that there is a reasonable passage from linear dynamical systems theory to a data-based nonlinear dynamical systems theory through reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces. This is a joint work with J. Bouvrie (MIT).

Mon, 23 Feb 2015

17:00 - 18:00
L4

A prirori estimates for the relativistic free boundary Euler equations in physical vacuum

Mahir Hadzic
(King's College London)
Abstract
We consider Euler equations on a fixed Lorentzian manifold. The fluid is initially supported on a compact domain and the boundary between the fluid and the vacuum is allowed to move. Imposing the so-called physical vacuum boundary condition, we will explain how to obtain a priori estimates for this problem. In particular, our functional framework allows us to track the regularity of the free boundary. This is joint work with S. Shkoller and J. Speck.
Mon, 23 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C2

A multiplicative analogue of Schnirelmann's Theorem

Aled Walker
(Oxford)
Abstract

In 1937 Vinogradov showed that every sufficiently large odd number is the sum of three primes, using bounds on the sums of additive characters taken over the primes. He was improving, rather dramatically, on an earlier result of Schnirelmann, which showed that every sufficiently large integer is the sum of at most 37 000 primes. We discuss a natural analogue of this question in the multiplicative group (Z/pZ)* and find that, although the current unconditional character sum technology is too weak to use Vinogradov's approach, an idea from Schnirelmann's work still proves fruitful. We will use a result of Selberg-Delange, an application of a small sieve, and a few easy ideas from additive combinatorics. 

Mon, 23 Feb 2015
15:45
L6

Affine Deligne-Lusztig varieties and the geometry of Euclidean reflection groups

Anne Thomas
(Glasgow)
Abstract

Let $G$ be a reductive group such as $SL_n$ over the field $k((t))$, where $k$ is an algebraic closure of a finite field, and let $W$ be the affine Weyl group of $G$.  The associated affine Deligne-Lusztig varieties $X_x(b)$ were introduced by Rapoport.  These are indexed by elements $x$ in $G$ and $b$ in $W$, and are related to many important concepts in algebraic geometry over fields of positive characteristic.  Basic questions about the varieties $X_x(b)$ which have remained largely open include when they are nonempty, and if nonempty, their dimension.  We use techniques inspired by geometric group theory and representation theory to address these questions in the case that $b$ is a translation.  Our approach is constructive and type-free, sheds new light on the reasons for existing results and conjectures, and reveals new patterns.  Since we work only in the standard apartment of the building for $G$, which is just the tessellation of Euclidean space induced by the action of the reflection group $W$, our results also hold over the p-adics.  This is joint work with Elizabeth Milicevic (Haverford) and Petra Schwer (Karlsruhe).

Mon, 23 Feb 2015
14:15
L5

Folded hyperkähler manifolds

Nigel Hitchin
(Oxford)
Abstract

The lecture will introduce the notion of a folded 4-dimensional hyperkähler manifold, give examples and prove a local existence theorem from boundary data using twistor methods, following an idea of Biquard.  

Mon, 23 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:00
Fisher Room

Wall-crossing, easy and smooth

Boris Pioline
(Pierre and Marie Curie University)
Abstract
The spectrum of BPS states in four-dimensional gauge theories and string vacua with N=2 supersymmetry is well-known to be jump across certain walls in moduli space, where bound states can decay. In this talk I will survey how the discontinuity can be understood in terms of the supersymmetric quantum mechanics of mutually non-local point particles. This physical picture 
suggests that, at any point in moduli space, the BPS spectrum can be viewed as a sum of bound states of absolutely stable `single-centered' constituents. This idea appears to be vindicated in the context of quiver moduli spaces. Finally, I shall explain how the discontinuous BPS indices can be combined into a `new' supersymmetric index, a function which sums up multi-particle state contributions and is continuous across the wall.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015

17:30 - 18:30
L6

Hardy type derivations on the surreal numbers

Alessandro Berarducci
(Universita di Pisa)
Abstract

The field of transseries was introduced by Ecalle to give a solution to Dulac's problem, a weakening of Hilbert's 16th problem. They form an elementary extension of the real exponential field and have received the attention of model theorists. Another such elementary extension is given by Conway's surreal numbers, and various connections with the transseries have been conjectured, among which the possibility of introducing a Hardy type derivation on the surreal numbers. I will present a complete solution to these conjectures obtained in collaboration with Vincenzo Mantova.
 

Thu, 19 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
L5

Polynomial values modulo primes on average, and the large(r) sieve

Fernando Shao
(Oxford)
Abstract

In sieve theory, one is concerned with estimating the size of a sifted set, which avoids certain residue classes modulo many primes. For example, the problem of counting primes corresponds to the situation when the residue class 0 is removed for each prime in a suitable range. This talk will be concerned about what happens when a positive proportion of residue classes is removed for each prime, and especially when this proporition is more than a half. In doing so we will come across an algebraic question: given a polynomial f(x) in Z[x], what is the average size of the value set of f reduced modulo primes?

Thu, 19 Feb 2015
16:00
L1

Optimal casino betting: why lucky coins and good memory are important

Sang Hu
(National University of Singapore)
Abstract

We consider the dynamic casino gambling model initially proposed by Barberis (2012) and study the optimal stopping strategy of a pre-committing gambler with cumulative prospect theory (CPT) preferences. We illustrate how the strategies computed in Barberis (2012) can be strictly improved by reviewing the entire betting history or by tossing random coins, and explain that such improvement is possible because CPT preferences are not quasi-convex. Finally, we develop a systematic and analytical approach to finding the optimal strategy of the gambler. This is a joint work with Prof. Xue Dong He (Columbia University), Prof. Jan Obloj, and Prof. Xun Yu Zhou.

Thu, 19 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
L3

Nonlinear Dynamics in Phononic Lattices

Chris Chong
(ETHZ)
Abstract
This talk concerns the behavior of acoustic waves within various nonlinear materials.  As a prototypical example we consider a system of discrete particles that interact nonlinearly through a so-called Hertzian contact.  With the use of analytical, numerical and experimental approaches we study the formation of solitary waves, dispersive shocks, and discrete breathers.
 
Thu, 19 Feb 2015

14:00 - 15:00
L5

Distinct solutions of nonlinear systems via deflation

Dr Patrick Farrell
(Oxford University)
Abstract

Nonlinear systems of partial differential equations (PDEs) may permit several distinct solutions. The typical current approach to finding distinct solutions is to start Newton's method with many different initial guesses, hoping to find starting points that lie in different basins of attraction. In this talk, we present an infinite-dimensional deflation algorithm for systematically modifying the residual of a nonlinear PDE problem to eliminate known solutions from consideration. This enables the Newton--Kantorovitch iteration to converge to several different solutions, even starting from the same initial guess. The deflated Jacobian is dense, but an efficient preconditioning strategy is devised, and the number of Krylov iterations is observed not to grow as solutions are deflated. The technique is then applied to computing distinct solutions of nonlinear PDEs, tracing bifurcation diagrams, and to computing multiple local minima of PDE-constrained optimisation problems.

Thu, 19 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:00
L6

Linear inviscid damping for monotone shear flows.

Christian Zillinger
(University of Bonn)
Abstract
While the 2D Euler equations incorporate
neither dissipation nor entropy increase and
even possess a Hamiltonian structure, they
exhibit damping close to linear shear flows.
The mechanism behind this "inviscid
damping" phenomenon is closely related to
Landau damping in plasma physics.
In this talk I give a proof of linear stability,
scattering and damping for general
monotone shear flows, both in the setting
of an infinite periodic channel and a finite
periodic channel with impermeable walls.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015
11:00
C5

"The first-order theory of G_Q".

Philip Dittman
(Oxford)
Abstract

Motivated by an open conjecture in anabelian geometry, we investigate which arithmetic properties of the rationals are encoded in the absolute Galois group G_Q. We give a model-theoretic framework for studying absolute Galois groups and discuss in what respect orderings and valuations of the field are known to their first-order theory. Some questions regarding local-global principles and the transfer to elementary extensions of Q are raised.

Wed, 18 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Self-maps on compact F-spaces.

Max Pitz
(Oxford University)
Abstract
Compact F-spaces play an important role in the area of compactification theory, the prototype being w*, the Stone-Cech remainder of the integers. Two curious topological characteristics of compact F-spaces are that they don’t contain convergent sequences (apart from the constant ones), and moreover, that they often contain points that don’t lie in the boundary of any countable subset (so-called weak P-points). In this talk we investigate the space of self-maps S(X) on compact zero-dimensional F-spaces X, endowed with the compact-open topology. A natural question is whether S(X) reflects properties of the ground space X. Our main result is that for zero-dimensional compact F-spaces X, also S(X) doesn’t contain convergent sequences. If time permits, I will also comment on the existence of weak P-points in S(X). This is joint work with Richard Lupton.
Wed, 18 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Groups acting on $\mathbb{R}$-trees

Alexander Margolis
(Oxford)
Abstract

In Bass-Serre theory, one derives structural properties of groups from their actions on simplicial trees. In this talk, we introduce the theory of groups acting on $\mathbb{R}$-trees. In particular, we explain how the Rips machine is used to classify finitely generated groups which act freely on $\mathbb{R}$-trees.

Wed, 18 Feb 2015

11:00 - 12:30
N3.12

Groups acting on R(ooted) Trees

Alejandra Garrido
(Oxford)
Abstract

In particular, some nice things about branch groups, whose subgroup structure  "sees" all actions on rooted trees.

Tue, 17 Feb 2015

14:30 - 15:00
L5

All-at-once solution of time-dependant PDE-constrained optimization problems

Eleanor McDonald
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

All-at-once schemes aim to solve all time-steps of parabolic PDE-constrained optimization problems in one coupled computation, leading to exceedingly large linear systems requiring efficient iterative methods. We present a new block diagonal preconditioner which is both optimal with respect to the mesh parameter and parallelizable over time, thus can provide significant speed- up. We will present numerical results to demonstrate the effectiveness of this preconditioner.

Tue, 17 Feb 2015
14:30
L6

Monochromatic cycle partitions - an exact result

Shoham Letzter
(Cambridge University)
Abstract
In 2011, Schelp introduced the idea of considering Ramsey-Turán type problems for graphs with large minimum degree. Inspired by his questions, Balogh, Barat, Gerbner, Gyárfás, and Sárközy suggested the following conjecture. Let $G$ be a graph on $n$ vertices with minimum degree at least $3n/4$. Then for every red and blue colouring of the edges of $G$, the vertices of $G$ may be partitioned into two vertex-disjoint cycles, one red and the other blue. They proved an approximate version of the conjecture, and recently DeBiasio and Nelsen obtained stronger approximate results. We prove the conjecture exactly (for large $n$). I will give an overview of the history of this problem and describe some of the tools that are used for the proof. I will finish with a discussion of possible future work for which the methods we use may be applicable.
Tue, 17 Feb 2015

14:00 - 14:30
L5

Quadrature and optimization for a better bound

Richard Slevinsky
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

There is a beautiful problem resulting from arithmetic number theory where a continuous and compactly supported function's 3-fold autoconvolution is constant. In this talk, we optimize the coefficients of a Chebyshev series multiplied by an endpoint singularity to obtain a highly accurate approximation to this constant. Convolving functions with endpoint singularities turns out to be a challenge for standard quadrature routines. However, variable transformations inducing double exponential endpoint decay are used to effectively annihilate the singularities in a way that keeps accuracy high and complexity low.

Tue, 17 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:15
L5

Thermalisation and Revivals following a Quantum Quench in a 1+1-dimensional CFT

John Cardy
Abstract

In a quantum quench, a system is prepared in some state
$|\psi_0\rangle$, usually the ground state of a hamiltonian $H_0$, and then
evolved unitarily with a different hamiltonian $H$. I study this problem
when $H$ is a 1+1-dimensional conformal field theory on a large circle of
length $L$, and the initial state has short-range correlations and
entanglement. I argue that (a) for times $\ell/2<t<(L-\ell)/2$  the
reduced density matrix of a subinterval of length $\ell$ is exponentially
close to that of a thermal ensemble; (b) despite this, for a rational CFT
the return amplitude $\langle\psi_0|e^{-iHt}|\psi_0\rangle$ is $O(1)$ at
integer multiples of $2t/\ell$ and has interesting structure at all rational
values of this ratio. This last result is related to the modular properties
of Virasoro characters.

Tue, 17 Feb 2015

11:00 - 12:30
N3.12

Groups acting on R(ooted) trees

Alejandra Garrido
(Oxford)
Abstract

In particular, some nice things about branch groups, whose subgroup structure "sees" all actions on rooted trees.

Mon, 16 Feb 2015

17:00 - 18:00
L5

The random paraxial wave equation and application to correlation-based imaging

Josselin Garnier
(Université Paris Diderot)
Abstract

We analyze wave propagation in random media in the so-called paraxial regime, which is a special high-frequency regime in which the wave propagates along a privileged axis. We show by multiscale analysis how to reduce the problem to the Ito-Schrodinger stochastic partial differential equation. We also show how to close and solve the moment equations for the random wave field. Based on these results we propose to use correlation-based methods for imaging in complex media and consider two examples: virtual source imaging in seismology and ghost imaging in optics.

Mon, 16 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C2

O-minimality and applications

Haden Spence
(Oxford)
Abstract

In this talk I will discuss the notion of o-minimality, which can be approached from either a model-theoretic standpoint, or an algebraic one.  I will exhibit some o-minimal structures, focussing on those most relevant to number theorists, and attempt to explain how o-minimality can be used to attain an assortment of results.

Mon, 16 Feb 2015
15:45
L6

Balanced walls in random groups

John M. Mackay
(Bristol)
Abstract

Building a suitable family of walls in the Cayley complex of a finitely
presented group G leads to a nontrivial action of G on a CAT(0) cube
complex, which shows that G does not have Kazhdan's property (T).  I
will discuss how this can be done for certain random groups in Gromov's
density model.  Ollivier and Wise (building on earlier work of Wise on
small-cancellation groups) have built suitable walls at densities <1/5,
but their method fails at higher densities.  In recent joint work with
Piotr Przytycki we give a new construction which finds walls at densites
<5/24.

Mon, 16 Feb 2015

15:45 - 16:45
Oxford-Man Institute

tba

Dmitry Chellak
Abstract

tba

Mon, 16 Feb 2015

14:15 - 15:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Learning with Cross-Kernel Matrices and Ideal PCA

Franz Kiraly
(University College London)
Abstract

 We describe how cross-kernel matrices, that is, kernel matrices between the data and a custom chosen set of `feature spanning points' can be used for learning. The main potential of cross-kernel matrices is that (a) they provide Nyström-type speed-ups for kernel learning without relying on subsampling, thus avoiding potential problems with sampling degeneracy, while preserving the usual approximation guarantees and the attractive linear scaling of standard Nyström methods and (b) the use of non-square matrices for kernel learning provides a non-linear generalization of the singular value decomposition and singular features. We present a novel algorithm, Ideal PCA (IPCA), which is a cross-kernel matrix variant of PCA, showcasing both advantages: we demonstrate on real and synthetic data that IPCA allows to (a) obtain kernel PCA-like features faster and (b) to extract novel features of empirical advantage in non-linear manifold learning and classification.

Mon, 16 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:00
L5

Singular Fibers and Coulomb Phases

Sakura Schafer-Nameki
(Kings College London)
Abstract

I will discuss how singular fibers in higher codimension in elliptically fibered Calabi-Yau fourfolds can be studied using Coulomb branch phases for d=3 supersymmetric gauge theories. This approach gives an elegent description of the generalized Kodaira fibers in terms of combinatorial/representation-theoretic objects called "box graphs", including the network of flops connecting distinct small resolutions. For physics applications, this approach can be used to constrain the possible matter spectra and possible U(1) charges (models with higher rank Mordell Weil group) for F-theory GUTs.

Fri, 13 Feb 2015
14:15
C1

Numerical methods in seismic imaging

Paul Childs
((ex) Schlumberger Gould Research)
Abstract

A form of PDE-constrained inversion is today used as an engineering tool for seismic imaging. Today there are some successful studies and good workflows are available. However, mathematicians will find some important unanswered questions: (1) robustness of inversion with highly nonconvex objective functions; (2) scalable solution highly oscillatory problem; and (3) handling of uncertainties. We shall briefly illustrate these challenges, and mention some possible solutions.

Fri, 13 Feb 2015

14:00 - 15:00
L2

Theory of evolutionary couplings and application to the prediction of protein 3D structure and fitness

Dr Chris Sander & Prof Debra Marks
(Harvard Medical School)
Abstract

Genomic sequences contain rich evolutionary information about functional constraints on macromolecules such as proteins. This information can be efficiently mined to detect evolutionary couplings between residues in proteins and address the long-standing challenge to compute protein three-dimensional structures from amino acid sequences. Substantial progress on this problem has become possible because of the explosive growth in available sequences and the application of global statistical methods. In addition to three-dimensional structure, the improved analysis of covariation helps identify functional residues involved in ligand binding, protein-complex formation and conformational changes. We expect computation of covariation patterns to complement experimental structural biology in elucidating the full spectrum of protein structures, their functional interactions and evolutionary dynamics. Use the http://evfold.org  server to compute EVcouplings and to predict 3D structure for large sequence families. References:  http://bit.ly/tob48p - Protein 3D Structure from high-throughput sequencing;  http://bit.ly/1DSqANO - 3D structure of transmembrane proteins from evolutionary constraints; http://bit.ly/1zyYpE7 - Sequence co-evolution gives 3D contacts and structures of protein complexes.

Fri, 13 Feb 2015
13:00
L6

Zubov's method for controlled diffusions with state constraints

Athena Picarelli
(Maths Institute University of Oxford)
Abstract

We consider a controlled stochastic system in presence of state-constraints. Under the assumption of exponential stabilizability of the system near a target set, we aim to characterize the set of points which can be asymptotically driven by an admissible control to the target with positive probability. We show that this set can be characterized as a level set of the optimal value function of a suitable unconstrained optimal control problem which in turn is the unique viscosity solution of a second order PDE which can thus be interpreted as a generalized Zubov equation.

Fri, 13 Feb 2015

10:00 - 11:00
L5

VerdErg - VETT, a new low-head hydropower generator: minimising the losses

Abstract

VerdErg Renewable Energy Ltd is developing a new hydropower unit for cost-effective energy generation at very low heads of pressure. The device is called the VETT after the underlying technology – Venturi Enhanced Turbine Technology. Flow into the VETT is split into two. The larger flow at low head transfers its energy to the smaller flow at a greater head. The smaller flow powers a conventional turbo-generator which can be a smaller, faster unit at an order of magnitude lower cost. Further, there are significant environmental benefits to fish and birds compared to the conventional hydropower solution. After several physical model test programmes* in the UK, France and The Netherlands along with CFD studies the efficiency now stands at 50%. We wish to increase that by understanding the major loss mechanisms and how they might be avoided or minimised.

The presentation will explain the VETT’s working principles and key relationships, together with some possible ideas for improvement. The comments of attendees on problem areas, potential solutions and how an enhanced understanding of key phenomena may be applied will be most welcome.

*(One was observed by Prof John Ockendon who identified a fairly extreme flow condition in a region previously thought to be benign.)

Thu, 12 Feb 2015

17:30 - 18:30
L6

Model theory and the distribution of orders in number fields

Jamshid Derakhshan
(Oxford University)
Abstract
Recently Kaplan, Marcinek, and Takloo-Bighash have proved an asymptotic formula for the number of orders of bounded discriminant  in a given quintic number field. An essential ingredient in their poof is a p-adic volume formula.  I will present joint results with Ramin Takloo Bighash on model-theoretic generalizations of the volume formulas and discuss connections to number theory.

 

Thu, 12 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Introduction to conformal symmetry

Agnese Bissi
(Oxford)
Abstract

 In this talk I will present a basic introduction to conformal symmetry from a physicist perspective. I will talk about infinitesimal and finite conformal transformations and the conformal group in diverse dimensions. 

Thu, 12 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
L5

Rational points on Kummer varieties

René Pannekoek
(Imperial College London)
Abstract

Given an abelian variety A over a number field k, its Kummer variety X is the quotient of A by the automorphism that sends each point P to -P. We study p-adic density and weak approximation on X by relating its rational points to rational points of quadratic twists of A. This leads to many examples of K3 surfaces over Q whose rational points lie dense in the p-adic topology, or in product topologies arising from p-adic topologies. Finally, the same method is used to prove that if the Brauer--Manin obstruction controls the failure of weak approximation on all Kummer varieties, then ranks of quadratic twists of (non-trivial) abelian varieties are unbounded. This last fact arises from joint work with David Holmes.

Thu, 12 Feb 2015
16:00
L4

Discrete time approximation of HJB equations via BSDEs with nonpositive jumps

Idris Kharroubi
(Université Paris Dauphine)
Abstract
We propose a new probabilistic numerical scheme for fully nonlinear equations of Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman (HJB) type associated to stochastic control problems, which is based on the a recent Feynman-Kac representation by means of control randomization and backward stochastic differential equation with nonpositive jumps. We study a discrete time approximation for the minimal solution to this class of BSDE when the time step goes to zero, which provides both an approximation for the value function and for an optimal control in feedback form. We obtained a convergence rate without any ellipticity condition on the controlled diffusion coefficient.
Thu, 12 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
L3

Convection of a reactive solute in a porous medium

Oliver Jensen
(Manchester)
Abstract

Abstract: Motivated loosely by the problem of carbon sequestration in underground aquifers, I will describe computations and analysis of one-sided two-dimensional convection of a solute in a fluid-saturated porous medium, focusing on the case in which the solute decays via a chemical reaction.   Scaling properties of the flow at high Rayleigh number are established and rationalized through an asymptotic model, that addresses the transient stability of a near-surface boundary layer and the structure of slender plumes that form beneath.  The boundary layer is shown to restrict the rate of solute transport to deep domains.  Knowledge of the plume structure enables slow erosion of the substrate of the reaction to be described in terms of a simplified free boundary problem.

Co-authors: KA Cliffe, H Power, DS Riley, TJ Ward

 

Thu, 12 Feb 2015

14:00 - 15:00
L5

The evolution of the universe recreated in a supercomputer

Professor Christian Klingenberg
(University of Wuerzburg)
Abstract

In this talk we will describe the steps towards self-consistent computer simulations of the evolution of the universe beginning soon after the Big Bang and ending with the formation of realistic stellar systems like the Milky Way. This is a multi-scale problem of vast proportions. The first step has been the Millennium Simulation, one of the largest and most successful numerical simulations of the Universe ever carried out. Now we are in the midst of the next step, where this is carried to a much higher level of physical fidelity on the latest supercomputing platforms. This talk will be illustrate how the role of mathematics is essential in this endeavor. Also computer simulations will be shown. This is joint work among others with Volker Springel.

 

Thu, 12 Feb 2015

12:00 - 13:00
L6

Twinning in Strained Ferroelastics: Microstructure and Statistics

Xiangdong Ding
(xi'an Jiatong University)
Abstract

The generation of functional interfaces such as superconducting and ferroelectric twin boundaries requires new ways to nucleate as many interfaces as possible in bulk materials and thin films. Materials with high densities of twin boundaries are often ferroelastics and martensites. Here we show that the nucleation and propagation of twin boundaries depend sensitively on temperature and system size. The geometrical mechanisms for the evolution of the ferroelastic microstructure under strain deformation remain similar in all thermal regimes, whereas their thermodynamic behavior differs dramatically: on heating, from power-law statistics via the Kohlrausch law to a Vogel-Fulcher law.We find that the complexity of the pattern can be well characterized by the number of junctions between twin boundaries. Materials with soft bulk moduli have much higher junction densities than those with hard bulk moduli. Soft materials also show an increase in the junction density with diminishing sample size. The change of the complexity and the number density of twin boundaries represents an important step forward in the development of ‘domain boundary engineering’, where the functionality of the materials is directly linked to the domain pattern.

Thu, 12 Feb 2015
11:00
C5

Matrix multiplication is determined by orthogonality and trace.

Chris Heunen
(Oxford)
Abstract

Everything measurable about a quantum system, as modelled by a noncommutative operator algebra, is captured by its commutative subalgebras. We briefly survey this programme, and zoom in one specific incarnation: any bilinear associative function on the set of n-by-n matrices over a field of characteristic not two, that makes the same vectors orthogonal as ordinary matrix multiplication and gives the same trace as ordinary matrix multiplication, must in fact be ordinary matrix multiplication (or its opposite). Model-theoretic questions about the hypotheses and scope of this theorem are raised.

Wed, 11 Feb 2015

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Subgroups of Aut($F_n$) and actions on CAT(0) spaces

Robert Kropholler
(Oxford)
Abstract

I will look at some decidability questions for subgroups of Aut($F_n$) for general $n$. I will then discuss semisimple actions of Aut($F_n$) on complete CAT(0) spaces proving that the Nielsen moves will act elliptically. I will also look at proving Aut($F_3$) is large and if time permits discuss the fact that Aut($F_n$) is not Kähler

Wed, 11 Feb 2015

11:00 - 12:30
N3.12

The Poincaré conjecture in dimensions 3 and 4.

Alejandro Betancourt
(Oxford)
Abstract

In this talk we will review some of the main ideas around Hamilton's program for the Ricci flow and see how they fit together to provide a proof of the Poincaré conjecture in dimension 3. We will then analyse this tools in the context of 4-manifolds.

Tue, 10 Feb 2015

17:00 - 18:00
C2

Spin projective representations of Weyl groups, Green polynomials, and nilpotent orbits

Dan Ciubotaru
(Oxford)
Abstract

The classification of irreducible representations of pin double covers of Weyl groups was initiated by Schur (1911) for the symmetric group and was completed for the other groups by A. Morris, Read and others about 40 years ago. Recently, a new relation between these projective representations, graded Springer representations, and the geometry of the nilpotent cone has emerged. I will explain these connections and the relation with a Dirac operator for (extended) graded affine Hecke algebras.  The talk is partly based on joint work with Xuhua He.