14:15
Torsion in cohomology, and torsors for simple algebraic groups
(K-Theory Day)
16:30
14:30
How does an amoeba tackle some geometrical puzzles? Smartness based on pattern formation of cellular rhythms
14:15
Inf-convolution of convex risk emasures and optimal risk transfer
Abstract
We develop a methodology to optimally design a financial issue to hedge
non-tradable risk on financial markets.The modeling involves a minimization
of the risk borne by issuer given the constraint imposed by a buyer who
enters the transaction if and only if her risk level remains below a given
threshold. Both agents have also the opportunity to invest all their residual
wealth on financial markets but they do not have the same access to financial
investments. The problem may be reduced to a unique inf-convolution problem
involving some transformation of the initial risk measures.
16:30
Models for discontinuous hypercritical shallow
water flows/
Problems in Shaped Charge Mechanics
16:30
14:30
Exponential Brownian motion and divided differences
Abstract
We calculate an analytic value for the correlation coefficient between a geometric, or exponential, Brownian motion and its time-average, a novelty being our use of divided differences to elucidate formulae. This provides a simple approximation for the value of certain Asian options regarding them as exchange options. We also illustrate that the higher moments of the time-average can be expressed neatly as divided differences of the exponential function via the Hermite-Genocchi integral relation, as well as demonstrating that these expressions agree with those obtained by Oshanin and Yor when the drift term vanishes.
16:00
Galois groups of p-class towers
Abstract
Galois groups of p-class towers of number fields have long been a mystery,
but recent calculations have led to glimpses of a rich theory behind them,
involving Galois actions on trees, families of groups whose derived series
have finite index, families of deficiency zero p-groups approximated by
p-adic analytic groups, and so on.
17:00
15:00
12:00
17:00
Half-eigenvalues and semilinear problems with jumping nonlinearities
Abstract
We consider semilinear Sturm-Liouville and elliptic problems with jumping
nonlinearities. We show how `half-eigenvalues' can be used to describe the
solvability of such problems and consider the structure of the set of
half-eigenvalues. It will be seen that for Sturm-Liouville problems the
structure of this set can be considerably more complicated for periodic than
for separated boundary conditions, while for elliptic partial differential
operators only partial results are known about the structure in general.
17:00
TBA
Abstract
We construct spaces of manifolds of various dimensions following
Vassiliev's approach to the theory of knots. These are infinite-dimensional
spaces with hypersurface, corresponding to manifolds with Morse singularities.
Connected components of the complement to this discriminant are homotopy
equivalent to the covering spaces of BDiff(M). These spaces appear to be a
natural base over which one can consider parametrised versions of Floer and
Seiberg-Witten theories.
15:45
TBA
Abstract
14:15
15:15
16:30
14:30
Smash products of linear categories and the Cartan-Leray spectral sequence
Pattern formation with a conservation law
Abstract
The formation of steady patterns in one space dimension is generically
governed, at small amplitude, by the Ginzburg-Landau equation.
But in systems with a conserved quantity, there is a large-scale neutral
mode that must be included in the asymptotic analysis for pattern
formation near onset. The usual Ginzburg-Landau equation for the amplitude
of the pattern is then coupled to an equation for the large-scale mode.
\\
These amplitude equations show that for certain parameters all regular
periodic patterns are unstable. Beyond the stability boundary, there
exist stable stationary solutions in the form of spatially modulated
patterns or localised patterns. Many more exotic localised states are
found for patterns in two dimensions.
\\
Applications of the theory include convection in a magnetic field,
providing an understanding of localised states seen in numerical
simulations.
17:00
17:00
17:00
Complexification phenomenon in a class of singular perturbations
15:45
15:30
14:15
Small time behaviour of double stochastic integrals and hedging under gamma constraints
Abstract
We formulate a problem of super-hedging under gamma constraint by
taking the portfolio process as a controlled state variable. This
leads to a non-standard stochastic control problem. An intuitive
guess of the associated Bellman equation leads to a non-parabolic
PDE! A careful analysis of this problem leads to the study of the
small time behaviour of double stochastic integrals. The main result
is a characterization of the value function of the super-replication
problem as the unique viscosity solution of the associated Bellman
equation, which turns out to be the parabolic envelope of the above
intuitive guess, i.e. its smallest parabolic majorant. When the
underlying stock price has constant volatility, we obtain an
explicit solution by face-lifting the pay-off of the option.
15:15
Irreducible representations and the Ziegler spectrum over generalised Weyl algebras and related rings
14:30
Neurogenesis in the developing spinal cord: making the right number of neurons at the right time
16:30
Nonhydrodynamic modes and lattice Boltzmann equations with general equations of state
Abstract
The lattice Boltzmann equation has been used successfully used to simulate
nearly incompressible flows using an isothermal equation of state, but
much less work has been done to determine stable implementations for other
equations of state. The commonly used nine velocity lattice Boltzmann
equation supports three non-hydrodynamic or "ghost'' modes in addition to
the macroscopic density, momentum, and stress modes. The equilibrium value
of one non-hydrodynamic mode is not constrained by the continuum equations
at Navier-Stokes order in the Chapman-Enskog expansion. Instead, we show
that it must be chosen to eliminate a high wavenumber instability. For
general barotropic equations of state the resulting stable equilibria do
not coincide with a truncated expansion in Hermite polynomials, and need
not be positive or even sign-definite as one would expect from arguments
based on entropy extremisation. An alternative approach tries to suppress
the instability by enhancing the damping the non-hydrodynamic modes using
a collision operator with multiple relaxation times instead of the common
single relaxation time BGK collision operator. However, the resulting
scheme fails to converge to the correct incompressible limit if the
non-hydrodynamic relaxation times are fixed in lattice units. Instead we
show that they must scale with the Mach number in the same way as the
stress relaxation time.
17:00
17:00
12:00
Gauge fields, Witten's conjecture and Twistor Diagrams (this is a joint seminar with String Theory)
17:00
15:45
The Brownian snake and random trees
Abstract
The Brownian snake (with lifetime given by a normalized
Brownian excursion) arises as a natural limit when studying random trees. This
may be used in both directions, i.e. to obtain asymptotic results for random
trees in terms of the Brownian snake, or, conversely, to deduce properties of
the Brownian snake from asymptotic properties of random trees. The arguments
are based on Aldous' theory of the continuum random tree.
I will discuss two such situations:
1. The Wiener index of random trees converges, after
suitable scaling, to the integral (=mean position) of the head of the Brownian
snake. This enables us to calculate the moments of this integral.
2. A branching random walk on a random tree converges, after
suitable scaling, to the Brownian snake, provided the distribution of the
increments does not have too large tails. For i.i.d increments Y with mean 0,
a necessary and sufficient condition is that the tails are o(y^{-4}); in
particular, a finite fourth moment is enough, but weaker moment conditions are
not.
14:15
An extension of Levy-Khinchine formula in semi-Dirichlet forms setting
Abstract
The celebrated Levy-Khintchine formula provides us an explicit
structure of Levy processes on $R^d$. In this talk I shall present a
structure result for quasi-regular semi-Dirichlet forms, i.e., for
those semi-Dirichlet forms which are associated with right processes
on general state spaces. The result is regarded as an extension of
Levy-Khintchine formula in semi-Dirichlet forms setting. It can also
be regarded as an extension of Beurling-Deny formula which is up to
now available only for symmetric Dirichlet forms.