Thu, 27 Oct 2011
13:00
DH 1st floor SR

Hedging Options On Exploding Exchange Rates

Johannes Ruf
(OMI)
Abstract

: Recently strict local martingales have been used to model

exchange rates. In such models, put-call parity does not hold if one

assumes minimal superreplicating costs as contingent claim prices. I

will illustrate how put-call parity can be restored by changing the

definition of a contingent claim price.

More precisely, I will discuss a change of numeraire technique when the

underlying is only a local martingale. Then, the new measure is not

necessarily equivalent to the old measure. If one now defines the price

of a contingent claim as the minimal superreplicating costs under both

measures, then put-call parity holds. I will discuss properties of this

new pricing operator.

To illustrate this techniques, I will discuss the class of "Quadratic

Normal Volatility" models, which have drawn much attention in the

financial industry due to their analytic tractability and flexibility.

This talk is based on joint work with Peter Carr and Travis Fisher.

Thu, 27 Oct 2011

12:00 - 13:00
SR2

Stability conditions on K3 surfaces

Heinrich Hartmann
Abstract

We will explain Bridgelands results on the stabiltiy manifold of a K3 surface. As an application we will define the stringy Kaehler moduli space of a K3 surface and comment on the mirror symmetry picture.

Wed, 26 Oct 2011

11:30 - 12:30

Coincidences between characteristic classes of surface bundles (St Hugh's, 80WR18)

Martin Palmer
Abstract

I will begin by defining the notion of a characteristic class of surface bundles, and constructing the MMM (Miller-Morita-Mumford) classes as examples. I will then talk about a recent theorem of Church, Farb, and Thibault which shows that the characteristic numbers associated to certain MMM-classes do not depend on how the total space is fibred as a surface bundle - they depend only on the topology of the total space itself. In particular they don't even depend on the genus of the fibre. Hence there are many 'coincidences' between the characteristic numbers of very different-looking surface bundles.

A corollary of this is an obstruction to low-genus fiberings: given a smooth manifold E, the non-vanishing of a certain invariant of E implies that any surface bundle with E as its total space must have a fibre with genus greater than a certain lower bound.

Also, following the paper of Church-Farb-Thibault, I will sketch how to construct examples of 4-manifolds which fibre in two distinct ways as a surface bundle over another surface, thus giving concrete examples to which the theorem applies.

Tue, 25 Oct 2011

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Exotic monotone Lagrangian tori

Agnes Gadbled
(Cambridge)
Abstract

There exist two constructions of families of exotic monotone Lagrangian tori in complex projective spaces and products of spheres, namely the one by Chekanov and Schlenk, and the one via the Lagrangian circle bundle construction of Biran. It was conjectured that these constructions give Hamiltonian isotopic tori. I will explain why this conjecture is true in the complex projective plane and the product of two two-dimensional spheres.

Tue, 25 Oct 2011

14:30 - 15:30
L3

The board game Hex – history, results, problems

Bjarne Toft
(University of Southern Denmark)
Abstract

Hex was discovered independently by Piet Hein in Copenhagen in 1942 and byJohn Nash in Princeton in 1948.  The game is interesting because its rules are very simple, yet it is not known how to play best possible.  For example, a winning first move for the first player (who does have  a winning strategy) is still unknown. The talk will tell the history of the game and give simple proofs for basic results about it. Also the reverse game of HEX,sometimes called REX, will be discussed. New results about REX are under publication in Discrete Mathematics in a paper:  How to play Reverse Hex (joint work with Ryan Hayward and Phillip Henderson).

Tue, 25 Oct 2011

12:00 - 13:00
L2

Six-dimensional space-time from quaternionic quantum mechanics

Dorje C. Brody (Brunel University)
Abstract

Quaternionic quantum Hamiltonians describing nonrelativistic spin particles

require the ambient physical space to have five dimensions. The quantum

dynamics of a spin-1/2 particle system characterised by a generic such

Hamiltonian is described. There exists, within the structure of quaternionic

quantum mechanics, a canonical reduction to three spatial dimensions upon

which standard quantum theory is retrieved. In this dimensional reduction,

three of the five dynamical variables oscillate around a cylinder, thus

behaving in a quasi one-dimensional manner at large distances. An analogous

mechanism exists in the case of octavic Hamiltonians, where the ambient

physical space has nine dimensions. Possible experimental tests in search

for the signature of extra dimensions at low energies are briefly discussed.

(Talk based on joint work with Eva-Maria Graefe, Imperial.)

Mon, 24 Oct 2011

17:00 - 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Partial Regularity Results for A Variational Problem for Nematic Liquid Crystal.

Hung Tran
(University of California, Berkeley)
Abstract

This is a joint work with Craig Evans. We study the partial regularity of minimizers for certain functionals in the calculus of variations, namely the modified Landau-de Gennes energy functional in nematic liquid crystal theory introduced by Ball and Majumdar.

Mon, 24 Oct 2011

16:00 - 17:00
SR1

Radix conversion for polynomials

Sebastian Pancratz
Abstract

We describe various approaches to the problem of expressing a polynomial $f(x) = \sum_{i=0}^{m} a_i x^i$ in terms of a different radix $r(x)$ as $f(x) = \sum_{j=0}^{n} b_j(x) r(x)^j$ with $0 \leq \deg(b_j) < \deg(r)$. Two approaches, the naive repeated division by $r(x)$ and the divide and conquer strategy, are well known. We also describe an approach based on the use of precomputed Newton inverses, which appears to offer significant practical improvements. A potential application of interest to number theorists is the fibration method for point counting, in current implementations of which the runtime is typically dominated by radix conversions.

Mon, 24 Oct 2011
15:45
L3

Asymptotic dimension for CAT(0) cube complexes

Nick Wright
(Southampton)
Abstract

In this talk I'll explain how to build CAT(0) cube complexes and construct Lipschitz maps between them. The existence of suitable Lipschitz maps is used to prove that the asymptotic dimension of a

CAT(0) cube complex is no more than its dimension.

Mon, 24 Oct 2011
15:45
Oxford-Man Institute

The continuous limit of large random planar maps

Jean-Francois Le Gall
(Universite of Paris sud and Institut Universitaire de France)
Abstract

Planar maps are graphs embedded in the plane, considered up to continuous deformation. They have been studied extensively in combinatorics, and they have also significant geometrical applications. Particular cases of planar maps are p-angulations, where each face (meaning each component of the complement of edges) has exactly p adjacent edges. Random planar maps have been used in theoretical physics, where they serve as models of random geometry.Our goal is to discuss the convergence in distribution of rescaled random planar maps viewed as random metric spaces.More precisely, we consider a random planar map M(n) which is uniformly distributed over the set of all p-angulations with n vertices. We equip the set of vertices of M(n) with the graph distance rescaled by the factor n to the power -1/4. Both in the case p=3 and when p>3 is even, we prove that the resulting random metric spaces converge as n tends to infinity to a universal object called the Brownian map. This convergence holds in the sense of the Gromov-Hausdorff distance between compact metric spaces. In the particular case of triangulations (p=3), this solves an open problem stated by Oded Schramm in his 2006 ICM paper. As a key tool, we use bijections between planar maps and various classes of labeled trees

Mon, 24 Oct 2011
14:15
L3

Fourier-Mukai transforms and deformations in generalized complex geometry

Justin Sawon
(University of North Carolina & Bonn)
Abstract

In this talk I will describe Toda's results on deformations of the category Coh(X) of coherent sheaves on a complex manifold X. They come from deformations of X as a complex manifold, non-commutative deformations, and gerby deformations (which can all be interpreted as deformations of X as a generalized complex manifold). Toda also described how to deform Fourier-Mukai equivalences, and I will present some examples coming from mirror SYZ fibrations.

 

Mon, 24 Oct 2011
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Rate of degeneracy of two point densities. Application to lowerbounds of hitting probabilities

Marta Sanz-Sole
(Universitat de Barcelona)
Abstract

We consider nonlinear stochastic wave equations in dimension d\le 3.

Using Malliavin Calculus, we give upper bounds for the small eigenvalues of the inverse of two point densities.These provide a rate of degeneracy when points go close to each other.  Then, we analyze the consequences of this result on lower estimates for hitting probabilities. 

Mon, 24 Oct 2011

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Bundles over nearly-Kähler homogeneous spaces in heterotic string theory

Michael Klaput
(Oxford)
Abstract

String compactifications incorporating non-vanishing H-flux have received increased attention over the past decade for their potential relevance to the moduli stabilization problem. Their internal spaces are in general not Kähler and, therefore, not Calabi-Yau. In the heterotic string an important technical problem is to construct gauge bundles on such spaces. I will present a method of how to explicitly construct gauge bundles over homogeneous nearly-Kähler manifolds of dimension six and discuss some of the arising implications for model building.

Fri, 21 Oct 2011

14:30 - 15:30
DH 3rd floor SR

The Timescales of The Ocean Circulation and Climate

Prof. Carl Wunsch
(MIT)
Abstract

Studies of the ocean circulation and climate have come to be dominated by the results of complex numerical models encompassing hundreds of thousands of lines of computer code and whose physics may be more difficult to penetrate than the real system. Some insight into the large-scale ocean circulation can perhaps be gained by taking a step back and considering the gross time scales governing oceanic changes. These can derived from a wide variety of simple considerations such as energy flux rates, signal velocities, tracer equilibrium times, and others. At any given time, observed changes are likely a summation of shifts taking place over all of these time scales.

Fri, 21 Oct 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Multivariate utility maximization with proportional transaction costs and random endowment

Luciano Campi
(Paris 13)
Abstract

Abstract: In this paper we deal with a utility maximization problem at finite horizon on a continuous-time market with conical (and time varying) constraints (particularly suited to model a currency market with proportional transaction costs). In particular, we extend the results in \cite{CO} to the situation where the agent is initially endowed with a random and possibly unbounded quantity of assets. We start by studying some basic properties of the value function (which is now defined on a space of random variables), then we dualize the problem following some convex analysis techniques which have proven very useful in this field of research. We finally prove the existence of a solution to the dual and (under an additional boundedness assumption on the endowment) to the primal problem. The last section of the paper is devoted to an application of our results to utility indifference pricing. This is a joint work with G. Benedetti (CREST).

Fri, 21 Oct 2011

11:15 - 12:30
DH 1st floor SR

Bio-film initiation

Ian Thompson
(Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford)
Thu, 20 Oct 2011

17:00 - 18:00
L3

Homogeneous structures and homomorphisms

Deborah Lockett (Leeds)
Abstract

After a short introduction to homogeneous relational structures (structures such that all local symmetries are global), I will discuss some different topics relating homogeneity to homomorphisms: a family of notions of 'homomorphism-homogeneity' that generalise homogeneity; generic endomorphisms of homogeneous structures; and constraint satisfaction problems.

Thu, 20 Oct 2011
16:00
L3

Nodal length fluctuations for arithmetic random waves

Igor Wigman
(Cardiff University)
Abstract

Using the spectral multiplicities of the standard torus, we
endow the Laplace eigenspaces with Gaussian probability measures.
This induces a notion of random Gaussian eigenfunctions
on the torus ("arithmetic random waves''.)  We study the
distribution of the nodal length of random Laplace eigenfunctions for high
eigenvalues,and our primary result is that the asymptotics for the variance is
non-universal, and is intimately related to the arithmetic of
lattice points lying on a circle with radius corresponding to the
energy. This work is joint with Manjunath Krishnapur and Par Kurlberg