Tue, 27 Nov 2012

15:45 - 16:45
SR1

Formality of ordinary and twisted de Rham complex from derived algebraic geometry

Andrei Caldararu
(University of Wisconsin)
Abstract

Beautiful results of Deligne-Illusie, Sabbah, and Ogus-Vologodsky show that certain modifications of the de Rham complex (either the usual one, or twisted versions of it that appear in the study of the cyclic homology of categories of matrix factorizations) are formal in positive characteristic. These are the crucial steps in proving algebraic analogues of the Hodge theorem (again, either in the ordinary setting or in the presence of a twisting). I will present these results along with a new approach to understanding them using derived intersection theory. This is joint work with Dima Arinkin and Marton Hablicsek.

Tue, 27 Nov 2012
14:30
SR1

The hitting time of rainbow connectivity two

Annika Heckel
(Oxford)
Abstract

Rainbow connectivity is a new concept for measuring the connectivity of a graph which was introduced in 2008 by Chartrand, Johns, McKeon and Zhang. In a graph G with a given edge colouring, a rainbow path is a path all of whose edges have distinct colours. The minimum number of colours required to colour the edges of G so that every pair of vertices is joined by at least one rainbow path is called the rainbow connection number rc(G) of the graph G.

For any graph G, rc(G) >= diam(G). We will discuss rainbow connectivity in the random graph setting and present the result that for random graphs, rainbow connectivity 2 happens essentially at the same time as diameter 2. In fact, in the random graph process, with high probability the hitting times of diameter 2 and of rainbow connection number 2 coincide

Tue, 27 Nov 2012

13:15 - 13:45
DH 3rd floor SR

The Mechanics of Multitubes

Stephen O'Keeffe
Abstract

Multi-layered cylinders, or 'multitubes', are ubiquitous throughout the biological world, from microscopic axons to plant stems. Whilst these structures share an underlying common geometry, each one fulfils a different key role in its relevant environment. For example plant stems provide a transport network for nutrients within the organism, whilst the tongue of a chameleon is used for prey capture. This talk will be concerned with the mechanical stability of multitubes. How do the material properties, applied tractions and geometry of elastic rods and tubes influence their critical buckling pressure and mode of buckling? We will discuss the phenomenon of differential growth, an important factor in the mechanical behaviour of such systems and introduce a mathematical framework, which can be used to model differential growth in soft tissues and predict the onset of buckling. We will also present a small number of applications for this research.

Mon, 26 Nov 2012

16:00 - 17:00
SR1

Once Upon a Time in Egypt: How the Story of Rational Points Began

Simon Myerson
(Oxford)
Abstract

A nice bed-time story to end the term. It is often said that ideas like the group law or isogenies on elliptic curves were 'known to Fermat' or are 'found
in Diophantus', but this is rarely properly explained. I will discuss the first work on rational points on curves from the point of view of modern number
theory, asking if it really did anticipate the methods we use today.

Mon, 26 Nov 2012

15:45 - 16:45
L3

A polynomial upper bound on Reidemeister moves

Marc Lackenby
(Oxford)
Abstract

Consider a diagram of the unknot with c crossings. There is a

sequence of Reidemeister

moves taking this to the trivial diagram. But how many moves are required?

In my talk, I will give

an overview of my recent proof that there is there is an upper bound on the

number of moves, which

is a polynomial function of c.

Mon, 26 Nov 2012

15:45 - 16:45
Oxford-Man Institute

tbc

Karol Szczypkowski
Abstract
Mon, 26 Nov 2012
14:15
L3

Geometry and topology of superfluid liquids

Michael Monastyrsky
(ITEP)
Abstract

The lecture will discuss some applications of topology to a number of interesting physical systems:

1. Classifications of Phases, 2. Classifications of one-dimensional textures in Nematics and Superfluid HE-3,

3. Classification of defects, 4. Phase transition in Liquid membranes.

The solution of these problems leads to interesting mathematics but the talk will also include some historical remarks.

Mon, 26 Nov 2012

14:15 - 15:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Fractional Laplacian with gradient perturbations

Tomasz Jakubowski
Abstract

We consider the fractional Laplacian perturbed by the gradient operator b(x)\nabla for various classes of vector fields b. We construct end estimate the corresponding semigroup.

Mon, 26 Nov 2012

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Scanning for stabilizing bundles in heterotic vacua

James Gray
(LMU Munich)
Abstract
I will describe methods for searching for bundles which are only holomorphic for isolated complex structures of a base Calabi-Yau threefold. These can be used, in the hidden sector of heterotic compactifications, to stabilize the associated moduli fields. Various bundle constructions will be covered, and the possibility and consequences of resolving the potentially singular threefolds which result will be discussed. If time permits, I will also briefly mention a large set of Calabi-Yau fourfolds which is currently being classified.
Fri, 23 Nov 2012

16:00 - 17:00
DH 1st floor SR

Exact Implied Volatility Expansions

Matt Lorig
(Princeton University)
Abstract

We derive an exact implied volatility expansion for any model whose European call price can be expanded analytically around a Black-Scholes call price. Two examples of our framework are provided (i) exponential Levy models and (ii) CEV-like models with local stochastic volatility and local stochastic jump-intensity.

Fri, 23 Nov 2012

12:00 - 13:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

$\chi$-Systems for Correlation Functions

Jonathan Toledo
(Perimeter Institute)
Abstract
We consider the strong coupling limit of 4-point functions of heavy operators in N=4 SYM dual to strings with no spin in AdS. We restrict our discussion for operators inserted on a line. The string computation factorizes into a state-dependent sphere part and a universal AdS contribution which depends only on the dimensions of the operators and the cross ratios. We use the integrability of the AdS string equations to compute the AdS part for operators of arbitrary conformal dimensions. The solution takes the form of TBA-like integral equations with the minimal AdS string-action computed by a corresponding free-energy-like functional. These TBA-like equations stem from a peculiar system of functional equations which we call a \chi-system. In principle one could use the same method to solve for the AdS contribution in the N-point function. An interesting feature of the solution is that it encodes multiple string configurations corresponding to different classical saddle-points. The discrete data that parameterizes these solutions enters through the analog of the chemical-potentials in the TBA-like equations. Finally, for operators dual to strings spinning in the same equator in S^5 (i.e. BPS operators of the same type) the sphere part is simple to compute. In this case (which is generically neither extremal nor protected) we can construct the complete, strong-coupling 4-point function.
Fri, 23 Nov 2012

10:00 - 11:30
DH 1st floor SR

Virtual Anglo-Saxons. Agent-based modelling in archaeology and palaeodemography

Andreas Duering
(Archaeology, Oxford)
Abstract

The University of Oxford’s modelling4all software is a wonderful tool to simulate early medieval populations and their cemeteries in order to evaluate the influence of palaeodemographic variables, such as mortality, fertility, catastrophic events and disease on settlement dispersal. In my DPhil project I will study archaeological sites in Anglo-Saxon England and the German south-west in a comparative approach. The two regions have interesting similarities in their early medieval settlement pattern and include some of the first sites where both cemeteries and settlements were completely excavated.

An important discovery in bioarchaeology is that an excavated cemetery is not a straightforward representation of the living population. Preservation issues and the limitations of age and sex estimation methods using skeletal material must be considered. But also the statistical procedures to calculate the palaeodemographic characteristics of archaeological populations are procrustean. Agent-based models can help archaeologists to virtually bridge the chasm between the excavated dead populations and their living counterparts in which we are really interested in.

This approach leads very far away from the archaeologist’s methods and ways of thinking and the major challenge therefore is to balance innovative ideas with practicability and tangibility.

Some of the problems for the workshop are:

1.) Finding the best fitting virtual living populations for the excavated cemeteries

2.) Sensitivity analyses of palaeodemographic variables

3.) General methodologies to evaluate the outcome of agent based models

4.) Present data in a way that is both statistically correct and up to date & clear for archaeologists like me

5.) Explore how to include analytical procedures in the model to present the archaeological community with a user-friendly and not necessarily overwhelming toolkit

 

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

17:00 - 18:00
L3

A non-desarguesian projective plane of analytic origin

Boris Zilber
(Oxford)
Abstract
(This is a joint result with Katrin Tent.) We construct a series of new omega-stable non-desarguesian projective planes, including ones of Morley rank 2, 
avoiding a direct use of Hrushovski's construction. Instead we make use of the field of complex numbers with a holomorphic function  (Liouville function) which is an omega-stable structure by results of A.Wilkie and P.Koiran.  We first find a pseudo-plane interpretable in the above analytic structure and then "collapse" the pseudo-plane to a projective plane applying a modification of Hrushovski's mu-function. 
Thu, 22 Nov 2012

16:00 - 17:00
DH 1st floor SR

An Energy model for the mechanically driven unfolding of titin macromolecules

Giuseppe Saccomandi
(Universita' degli Studi Perugia)
Abstract

We propose a model to reproduce qualitatively and quantitatively the experimental behavior obtained by the AFM techniques for the titin. Via an energetic based minimization approach we are able to deduce a simple analytical formulations for the description of the mechanical behavior of multidomain proteins, giving a physically base description of the unfolding mechanism. We also point out that our model can be inscribed in the led of the pseudo-elastic variational damage model with internal variable and fracture energy criteria of the continuum mechanics. The proposed model permits simple analytical calculations and

to reproduce hard-device experimental AFM procedures. The proposed model also permits the continuum limit approximation which maybe useful to the development of a three-dimensional multiscale constitutive model for biological tissues.

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

15:00 - 16:00
SR1

Teichmüller Curves in TQFT

Shehryar Sikander
(Aarhus University)
Abstract

In this talk we show how Teichmüller curves can be used to compute

quantum invariants of certain Pseudo-Anasov mapping tori. This involves

computing monodromy of the Hitchin connection along closed geodesics of

the Teichmüller curve using iterated integrals. We will mainly focus on

the well known Teichmüller curve generated by a pair of regular

pentagons. This is joint work with J. E. Andersen.

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Cherednik algebras for curves and deformed preprojective algebras

Dr Oleg Chalykh
Abstract

To any complex smooth variety Y with an action of a finite group G, Etingof associates a global Cherednik algebra. The usual rational Cherednik algebra corresponds to the case of Y= C^n and a finite Coxeter group G

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

14:00 - 15:00
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, nr Didcot

Domain decomposition for total variation regularisation and applications

Dr Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb
(DAMTP, University of Cambridge)
Abstract

Domain decomposition methods were introduced as techniques for solving partial differential equations based on a decomposition of the spatial domain of the problem into several subdomains. The initial equation restricted to the subdomains defines a sequence of new local problems. The main goal is to solve the initial equation via the solution of the local problems. This procedure induces a dimension reduction which is the major responsible of the success of such a method. Indeed, one of the principal motivations is the formulation of solvers which can be easily parallelized.

In this presentation we shall develop a domain decomposition algorithm to the minimization of functionals with total variation constraints. In this case the interesting solutions may be discontinuous, e.g., along curves in 2D. These discontinuities may cross the interfaces of the domain decomposition patches. Hence, the crucial difficulty is the correct treatment of interfaces, with the preservation of crossing discontinuities and the correct matching where the solution is continuous instead. I will present our domain decomposition strategy, including convergence results for the algorithm and numerical examples for its application in image inpainting and magnetic resonance imaging.

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

13:00 - 15:00
DH 1st floor SR

Self referential options

Jeff Dewynn
Abstract

A number of pricing models for electricity and carbon credit pricing involve nonlinear dependencies between two, or more, of the processes involved; for example, the models developed by Schwarz and Howison. The consequences of these nonlinearities are not well understood.

In this talk I will discuss some much simpler models, namely options whose values are defined self-referentially, which have been looked at in order to better understand the effects of these non-linear dependencies.

Wed, 21 Nov 2012
16:00
SR2

Magnus QI: the motion picture, featuring the Magnus embedding

Andrew Sale
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Let F be a free group, and N a normal subgroup of F with derived subgroup N'. The Magnus embedding gives a way of seeing F/N' as a subgroup of a wreath product of a free abelian group over over F/N. The aim is to show that the Magnus embedding is a quasi-isometric embedding (hence "Q.I." in the title). For this I will use an alternative geometric definition of the embedding (hence "picture"), which I will show is equivalent to the definition which uses Fox calculus. Please note that we will assume no prior knowledge of calculus.

Tue, 20 Nov 2012
17:00
L2

"Nielsen equivalence and groups whose profinite genus is infinite"

Martin Bridson
(Oxford)
Abstract

In our 2004 paper, Fritz Grunewald and I constructed the first
pairs of finitely presented, residually finite groups $u: P\to G$
such that $P$ is not isomorphic to $G$ but the map that $u$ induces on
profinite completions is an isomorphism. We were unable to determine if
there might exist finitely presented, residually finite groups $G$ that
with infinitely many non-isomorphic finitely presented subgroups $u_n:
P_n\to G$ such that $u_n$ induces a profinite isomorphism. I shall
discuss how two recent advances in geometric group theory can be used in
combination with classical work on Nielsen equivalence to settle this
question.

Tue, 20 Nov 2012

15:45 - 16:45
SR1

SEMINAR CANCELLED

Ed Segal
(Imperial)
Abstract

SEMINAR CANCELLED