Mon, 28 Oct 2013

17:00 - 18:00
L6

Low-regularity Riemannian metrics and the positive mass theorem

James Grant
(University of Surrey)
Abstract

We show that the positive mass theorem holds for

asymptotically flat, $n$-dimensional Riemannian manifolds with a metric

that is continuous, lies in the Sobolev space $W^{2, n/2}_{loc}$, and

has non-negative scalar curvature in the distributional sense. Our

approach requires an analysis of smooth approximations to the metric,

and a careful control of elliptic estimates for a related conformal

transformation problem. If the metric lies in $W^{2, p}_{loc}$ for

$p>n/2$, then we show that our metrics may be approximated locally

uniformly by smooth metrics with non-negative scalar curvature.

This talk is based on joint work with N. Tassotti and conversations with

J.J. Bevan.

Mon, 28 Oct 2013

15:45 - 16:45
Oxford-Man Institute

Small-particle scaling limits in a regularized Laplacian growth model"

Alan Sola
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

With F. Johansson Viklund (Columbia) and A. Turner (Lancaster), we have studied a regularized version of the Hastings-Levitov model of random Laplacian growth. In addition to the usual feedback parameter $\alpha>0$, this regularized version of the growth process features a smoothing parameter $\sigma>0$.

We prove convergence of random clusters, in the limit as the size of the individual aggregating particles tends to zero, to deterministic limits, provided the smoothing parameter does not tend to zero too fast. We also study scalings limit of the harmonic measure flow on the boundary, and show that it can be described in terms of stopped Brownian webs on the circle. In contrast to the case $\alpha=0$, the flow does not always collapse into a single Brownian motion, which can be interpreted as a random number of infinite branches being present in the clusters.

Mon, 28 Oct 2013

14:15 - 15:15
Oxford-Man Institute

The boundary Harnack principle in fractal spaces

Janna Lier
(Bonn University)
Abstract

Abstract: The boundary Harnack principle states that the ratio of any two functions, which are positive and harmonic on a domain, is bounded near some part of the boundary where both functions vanish. A given domain may or may not have this property, depending on the geometry of its boundary and the underlying metric measure space.

In this talk, we will consider a scale-invariant boundary Harnack principle on domains that are inner uniform. This has applications such as two-sided bounds on the Dirichlet heat kernel, or the identification of the Martin boundary and the topological boundary for bounded inner uniform domains.

The inner uniformity provides a large class of domains which may have very rough boundary as long as there are no cusps. Aikawa and Ancona proved the scale-invariant boundary Harnack principle on inner uniform domains in Euclidean space. Gyrya and Saloff-Coste gave a proof in the setting of non-fractal strictly local Dirichlet spaces that satisfy a parabolic Harnack inequality.

I will present a scale-invariant boundary Harnack principle for inner uniform domains in metric measure Dirichlet spaces that satisfy a parabolic Harnack inequality. This result applies to fractal spaces.

Mon, 28 Oct 2013

12:00 - 13:00
L5

An Abundance of K3 Fibrations from Polyhedra with Interchangeable Parts

Philip Candelas
(Oxford)
Abstract
Even a cursory inspection of the Hodge plot associated with Calabi-Yau threefolds that are hypersurfaces in toric varieties reveals striking structures. These patterns correspond to webs of elliptic-K3 fibrations whose mirror images are also elliptic-K3 fibrations. Such manifolds arise from reflexive polytopes that can be cut intotwo parts along slices corresponding to the K3 fibers. Any two half-polytopes over a given slice can be combined into a reflexive polytope. This fact, together with a remarkable relation on the additivity of Hodge numbers, explains much of the structure of the observed patterns.
Fri, 25 Oct 2013

16:00 - 17:00
L4

Asymmetric information and risk aversion of market makers

Umut Cetin
(Dept. of Mathematics, LSE)
Abstract

We analyse the impact of market makers' risk aversion on the equilibrium in a speculative market consisting of a risk neutral informed trader and noise traders. The unwillingness of market makers to bear risk causes the informed trader to absorb large shocks in their inventories. The informed trader's optimal strategy is to drive the market price to its fundamental value while disguising her trades as the ones of an uninformed strategic trader. This results in a mean reverting demand, price reversal, and systematic changes in the market depth. We also find that an increase in risk aversion leads to lower market depth, less efficient prices, stronger price reversal and slower convergence to fundamental value. The endogenous value of private information, however, is non-monotonic in risk aversion. We will mainly concentrate on the case when the private signal of the informed is static. If time permits, the implications of a dynamic signal will be discussed as well.

Based on a joint work with Albina Danilova.

Fri, 25 Oct 2013

14:15 - 15:15
C6

Order in Chaos: The Emergence of Pattern in Random Processes

William Newman
(UCLA)
Abstract

Many years ago, Mark Kac was consulted by biologist colleague Lamont Cole regarding field-based observations of animal populations that suggested the existence of 3-4 year cycles in going from peak to peak. Kac provided an elegant argument for how purely random sequences of numbers could yield a mean value of 3 years, thereby establishing the notion that pattern can seemingly emerge in random processes. (This does not, however, mean that there could be a largely deterministic cause of such population cycles.)

By extending Kac's argument, we show how the distribution of cycle length can be analytically established using methods derived from random graph theory, etc. We will examine how such distributions emerge in other natural settings, including large earthquakes as well as colored Brownian noise and other random models and, for amusement, the Standard & Poor's 500 index for percent daily change from 1928 to the present.

We then show how this random model could be relevant to a variety of spatially-dependent problems and the emergence of clusters, as well as to memory and the aphorism "bad news comes in threes." The derivation here is remarkably similar to the former and yields some intriguing closed-form results. Importantly, the centroids or "centers of mass" of these clusters also yields clusters and a hierarchy then emerges. Certain "universal" scalings appear to emerge and scaling factors reminiscent of Feigenbaum numbers. Finally, as one moves from one dimension to 2, 3, and 4 dimensions, the scaling behaviors undergo modest change leaving this scaling phenomena qualitatively intact.

Finally, we will show how that an adaptation of the Langevin equation from statistical physics provides not simply a null-hypothesis for matching the observation of 3-4 year cycles, but a remarkably simple model description for the behavior of animal populations.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

17:15 - 18:15
L6

New transfer principles and applications to represenation theory

Immanuel Halupczok
(Leeds)
Abstract

The transfer principle of Ax-Kochen-Ershov says that every first order sentence φ in the language of valued fields is, for p sufficiently big, true in ℚ_p iff it is true in \F_p((t)). Motivic integration allowed to generalize this to certain kinds of non-first order sentences speaking about functions from the valued field to ℂ. I will present some new transfer principles of this kind and explain how they are useful in representation theory. In particular, local integrability of Harish-Chandra characters, which previously was known only in ℚ_p, can be transferred to \F_p((t)) for p >> 1. (I will explain what this means.)

This is joint work with Raf Cluckers and Julia Gordon.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

16:00 - 17:30
C6

GIT, Symplectic Reduction and the Kempf-Ness Theorem

Tom Hawes
Abstract

Consider a smooth, complex projective variety X inside P^n and an action of a reductive linear algebraic group G inside GL(n+1,C). On the one hand, we can view this as an algebra-geometric set-up and use geometric invariant theory (GIT) to construct a quotient variety X // G, which parameterises `most' of the closed orbits of X. On the other hand, X is naturally a symplectic manifold, and since G is reductive we can take a maximal real compact Lie subgroup K of G and consider the symplectic reduction of X by K with respect to an appropriate moment map. The Kempf-Ness theorem then says that the results of these two constructions are homeomorphic. In this talk I will define GIT and symplectic reduction and try to sketch the proof of the Kempf-Ness theorem.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

16:00 - 17:00
L3

Connectivity in confined dense networks

Carl Dettman
(Bristol)
Abstract

We consider a random geometric graph model relevant to wireless mesh networks. Nodes are placed uniformly in a domain, and pairwise connections

are made independently with probability a specified function of the distance between the pair of nodes, and in a more general anisotropic model, their orientations. The probability that the network is (k-)connected is estimated as a function of density using a cluster expansion approach. This leads to an understanding of the crucial roles of

local boundary effects and of the tail of the pairwise connection function, in contrast to lower density percolation phenomena.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

14:00 - 15:00
L5

A geometric theory of phase transitions in convex optimization

Dr Martin Lotz
(University of Manchester)
Abstract

Convex regularization has become a popular approach to solve large scale inverse or data separation problems. A prominent example is the problem of identifying a sparse signal from linear samples my minimizing the l_1 norm under linear constraints. Recent empirical research indicates that many convex regularization problems on random data exhibit a phase transition phenomenon: the probability of successfully recovering a signal changes abruptly from zero to one as the number of constraints increases past a certain threshold. We present a rigorous analysis that explains why phase transitions are ubiquitous in convex optimization. It also describes tools for making reliable predictions about the quantitative aspects of the transition, including the location and the width of the transition region. These techniques apply to regularized linear inverse problems, to demixing problems, and to cone programs with random affine constraints. These applications depend on a new summary parameter, the statistical dimension of cones, that canonically extends the dimension of a linear subspace to the class of convex cones.

Joint work with Dennis Amelunxen, Mike McCoy and Joel Tropp.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

13:00 - 14:00
L6

Various

Wei Wei and Julen Rotaetxe
Abstract

Wei Wei

\newline

Title: "Optimal Switching at Poisson Random Intervention Times"

(joint work with Dr Gechun Liang)

\newline

Abstract: The paper introduces a new class of optimal switching problems, where

the player is allowed to switch at a sequence of exogenous Poisson

arrival times, and the underlying switching system is governed by an

infinite horizon backward stochastic differential equation system. The

value function and the optimal switching strategy are characterized by

the solution of the underlying switching system. In a Markovian setting,

the paper gives a complete description of the structure of switching

regions by means of the comparison principle.

\newline

Julen Rotaetxe

\newline

Title: Applicability of interpolation based finite difference method to problems in finance

\newline

Abstract:

I will present the joint work with Christoph Reisinger on

the applicability of a numerical scheme relying on finite differences

and monotone interpolation to discretize linear and non-linear diffusion

equations. We propose suitable transformations to the process modeling

the underlying variable in order to overcome issues stemming from the

width of the stencil near the boundaries of the discrete spatial domain.

Numerical results would be given for typical diffusion models used in

finance in both the linear and non-linear setting.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

12:00 - 13:00
L6

Nonlinear wave equations on time dependent inhomogeneous backgrounds

Dr. Shiwu Yang
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

We study the nonlinear wave equations on a class of asymptotically flat Lorentzian manifolds $(\mathbb{R}^{3+1}, g)$ with time dependent inhomogeneous metric g. Based on a new approach for proving the decay of solutions of linear wave equations, we give several applications to nonlinear problems. In particular, we show the small data global existence result for quasilinear wave equations satisfying the null condition on a class of time dependent inhomogeneous backgrounds which do not settle to any particular stationary metric.

Thu, 24 Oct 2013

11:00 - 12:00
C4

Logical limit laws for minor-closed classes of graphs

Marc Noy
(Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya)
Abstract

Let $G$ be an addable minor-closed class of graphs. We prove that a zero-one law holds in monadic second-order logic (MSO) for connected graphs in G, and a convergence law in MSO for all graphs in $G$. For each surface $S$, we prove the existence of a zero-one law in first order logic (FO) for connected graphs embeddable in $S$, and a convergence law in FO for all graphs embeddable in $S$. Moreover, the limiting probability that a given FO sentence is satisfied is independent of the surface $S$. If $G$ is an addable minor-closed class, we prove that the closure of the set of limiting probabilities is a finite union of intervals, and it is the same for FO and MSO. For the class of planar graphs it consists of exactly 108 intervals. We give examples of non-addable classes where the results are quite different: for instance, the zero-one law does not hold for caterpillars, even in FO. This is joint work with Peter Heinig, Tobias Müller and Anusch Taraz.

Wed, 23 Oct 2013

16:00 - 17:00
C6

Quasirandomness for Finite Groups and Applications

Henry Bradford
(Oxford)
Abstract

A group is said to be quasirandom if all its unitary representations have “large” dimension. After introducing quasirandom groups and their basic properties, I shall turn to recent applications in two directions: constructions of expanders and non-existence of large product-free sets.

Wed, 23 Oct 2013
11:30
Queen's College

Group word problems related to the context-free languages

Tara Brough
(St Andrews)
Abstract
The word problem of a group $G$ with respect to a generating set $X$ is the set of all words in elements of $X$ and their inverses which represent the identity in $G$.  A formal language is a set of words over a finite alphabet, and so word problems of groups can be viewed as formal languages.
In this talk I will give an introduction to formal languages, concentrating on context-free languages and several related classes.  I will define these languages by means of automata.  I will then give a survey of research on groups whose word problem belongs to the language classes I have introduced, beginning with the classification of groups with context-free word problem (Muller and Schupp, 1983).  I will also discuss some of the open problems in this area.
Tue, 22 Oct 2013
17:00
C5

Symplectic Alternating Algebras

Gunnar Traustason
(Bath)
Abstract

Let F be a field. A symplectic alternating algebra over F

consists of a symplectic vector space V over F with a non-degenerate

alternating form that is also equipped with a binary alternating

product · such that the law (u·v, w)=(v·w, u) holds. These algebraic

structures have arisen from the study of 2-Engel groups but seem also

to be of interest in their own right with many beautiful properties.

We will give an overview with a focus on some recent work on the

structure of nilpotent symplectic alternating algebras.

Tue, 22 Oct 2013

15:45 - 16:45
L4

Noncommutative algebraic geometry of isolated hypersurface singularities II

Toby Dyckerhoff
(Oxford)
Abstract

The concept of a matrix factorization was originally introduced by Eisenbud to study syzygies over local rings of singular hypersurfaces. More recently, interactions with mathematical physics, where matrix factorizations appear in quantum field theory, have provided various new insights. I will explain how matrix factorizations can be studied in the context of noncommutative algebraic geometry based on differential graded categories. We will see the relevance of the noncommutative analogue of de Rham cohomology in terms of classical singularity theory. Finally, I will outline how the Kapustin-Li formula for the noncommutative Serre duality pairing (originally computed via path integral methods) can be mathematically explained using a combination of homological perturbation theory and local duality.
Partly based on joint work with Daniel Murfet.

Tue, 22 Oct 2013

14:30 - 15:00
L5

Alternating minimal energy methods for linear systems in higher dimensions.

Dmitry Savostyanov
(University of Southampton)
Abstract

We propose a new algorithm for the approximate solution of large-scale high-dimensional tensor-structured linear systems. It can be applied to high-dimensional differential equations, which allow a low-parametric approximation of the multilevel matrix, right-hand side and solution in a tensor product format. We apply standard one-site tensor optimisation algorithm (ALS), but expand the tensor manifolds using the classical iterative schemes (e.g. steepest descent).  We obtain the rank--adaptive algorithm with the theoretical convergence estimate not worse than the one of the steepest descent, and fast practical convergence, comparable or even better than the convergence of more expensive two-site optimisation algorithm (DMRG).
The method is successfully applied for a high--dimensional problem of quantum chemistry, namely the NMR simulation of a large peptide.

This is a joint work with S.Dolgov (Max-Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany), supported by RFBR and EPSRC grants.

Keywords: high--dimensional problems, tensor train format, ALS, DMRG, steepest descent, convergence rate, superfast algorithms, NMR.