Tue, 04 May 2010

13:15 - 14:00
DH 1st floor SR

Parallel stochastic simulation using graphics processing units for the Systems Biology Toolbox for MATLAB

Guido Klingbeil
(Oxford)
Abstract

Graphics processing units (GPU) are well suited to decrease the

computational in-

tensity of stochastic simulation of chemical reaction systems. We

compare Gillespie’s

Direct Method and Gibson-Bruck’s Next Reaction Method on GPUs. The gain

of the

GPU implementation of these algorithms is approximately 120 times faster

than on a

CPU. Furthermore our implementation is integrated into the Systems

Biology Toolbox

for Matlab and acts as a direct replacement of its Matlab based

implementation.

Tue, 04 May 2010

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Toposes in algebraic quantum theory

Chris Heunen (Comlab)
Abstract

Topology can be generalised in at least two directions: pointless

topology, leading ultimately to topos theory, or noncommutative

geometry. The former has the advantage that it also carries a logical

structure; the latter captures quantum settings, of which the logic is

not well understood generally. We discuss a construction making a

generalised space in the latter sense into a generalised space in the

former sense, i.e. making a noncommutative C*-algebra into a locale.

This construction is interesting from a logical point of view,

and leads to an adjunction for noncommutative C*-algebras that extends

Gelfand duality.

Mon, 03 May 2010

17:00 - 18:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

A model of crystal growth with corner regularization

Aaron N. K. Yip
(Purdue)
Abstract

We investigate a dynamic model of two dimensional crystal growth

described by a forward-backward parabolic equation. The ill-posed

region of the equation describes the motion of corners on the surface.

We analyze a fourth order regularized version of this equation and

show that the dynamical behavior of the regularized corner can be

described by a traveling wave solution. The speed of the wave is found

by rigorous asymptotic analysis. The interaction between multiple

corners will also be presented together with numerical simulations.

This is joint work in progress with Fang Wan.

Fri, 30 Apr 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Numerical Approximation and BSDE representation for Switching Problems

Romuald Elie
(Dauphine)
Abstract

Hamadène and Jeanblanc provided a BSDE representation for the resolution of bi-dimensional continuous time optimal switching problems. For example, an energy producer faces the possibility to switch on or off a power plant depending on the current price of electricity and corresponding comodity. A BSDE representation via multidimensional reflected BSDEs for this type of problems in dimension larger than 2 has been derived by Hu and Tang as well as Hamadène and Zhang [2]. Keeping the same example in mind, one can imagine that the energy producer can use different electricity modes of production, and switch between them depending on the commodity prices. We propose here an alternative BSDE representation via the addition of constraints and artificial jumps. This allows in particular to reinterpret the solution of multidimensional reflected BSDEs in terms of one-dimensional constrained BSDEs with jumps. We provide and study numerical schemes for the approximation of these two type of BSDEs

Fri, 30 Apr 2010
10:00
DH 3rd floor SR

OCIAM meeting

Abstract

NO WORKSHOP - 09:45 coffee in DH Common Room for those attending the OCIAM Meeting

Thu, 29 Apr 2010
17:00
L3

Elimination of wild ramification and local uniformization in arbitrary characteristic

Franz-Viktor Kuhlmann
(Saskatoon)
Abstract

Elimination of wild ramification is used in the structure theory of valued function fields, with applications in areas such as local uniformization (i.e., local resolution of singularities) and the model theory of valued fields. I will give a survey on the role that Artin-Schreier extensions play in the elimination of wild ramification, and corresponding main theorems on the structure of valued function fields. I will show what these results tell us about local uniformization. I have shown that local uniformization is always possible after a separable extension of the function field of the algebraic variety (separable "alteration"). This was extended to the arithmetic case in joint work with Hagen Knaf. Recently, Michael Temkin has proved local uniformization by purely inseparable alteration.

Further, I will describe a classification of Artin-Schreier extensions with non-trivial defect. It can be used to improve one of the above mentioned main theorems ("Henselian Rationality"). This could be a key for a purely valuation theoretical proof of Temkin's result. On the other hand, the classification shows that separable alteration and purely inseparable alteration are just two ways to eliminate the critical defects. So the existence of these two seamingly "orthogonal" local uniformization results does not necessarily indicate that local uniformization without alteration is possible.

Thu, 29 Apr 2010

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

A Primal-Dual Regularized Interior-Point Method for Convex Quadratic Programs

Prof Dominique Orban
(Canada)
Abstract

Interior-point methods for linear and convex quadratic programming

require the solution of a sequence of symmetric indefinite linear

systems which are used to derive search directions. Safeguards are

typically required in order to handle free variables or rank-deficient

Jacobians. We propose a consistent framework and accompanying

theoretical justification for regularizing these linear systems. Our

approach is akin to the proximal method of multipliers and can be

interpreted as a simultaneous proximal-point regularization of the

primal and dual problems. The regularization is termed "exact" to

emphasize that, although the problems are regularized, the algorithm

recovers a solution of the original problem. Numerical results will be

presented. If time permits we will illustrate current research on a

matrix-free implementation.

This is joint work with Michael Friedlander, University of British Columbia, Canada

Thu, 29 Apr 2010
13:00
DH 1st floor SR

Girsanov's theorem, martingale representation and BSDE

Zhongmin Qian
(Oxford)
Abstract

This talk I present a study of BSDEs with non-linear terms of quadratic growth by using Girsanov's theorem. In particular we are able to establish a non-linear version of the Cameron-Martin formula, which can be for example used to obtain gradient estimates for some non-linear parabolic equations.

Thu, 29 Apr 2010

12:30 - 13:30
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Rotational Elasticity

Dmitri Vassiliev
(University College, London)
Abstract

We consider a 3-dimensional elastic continuum whose material points

can experience no displacements, only rotations. This framework is a

special case of the Cosserat theory of elasticity. Rotations of

material points of the continuum are described mathematically by

attaching to each geometric point an orthonormal basis which gives a

field of orthonormal bases called the coframe. As the dynamical

variables (unknowns) of our theory we choose the coframe and a

density.

In the first part of the talk we write down the general dynamic

variational functional of our problem. In doing this we follow the

logic of classical linear elasticity with displacements replaced by

rotations and strain replaced by torsion. The corresponding

Euler-Lagrange equations turn out to be nonlinear, with the source

of this nonlinearity being purely geometric: unlike displacements,

rotations in 3D do not commute.

In the second part of the talk we present a class of explicit

solutions of our Euler-Lagrange equations. We call these solutions

plane waves. We identify two types of plane waves and calculate

their velocities.

In the third part of the talk we consider a particular case of our

theory when only one of the three rotational elastic moduli, that

corresponding to axial torsion, is nonzero. We examine this case in

detail and seek solutions which oscillate harmonically in time but

depend on the space coordinates in an arbitrary manner (this is a

far more general setting than with plane waves). We show [1] that

our second order nonlinear Euler-Lagrange equations are equivalent

to a pair of linear first order massless Dirac equations. The

crucial element of the proof is the observation that our Lagrangian

admits a factorisation.

[1] Olga Chervova and Dmitri Vassiliev, "The stationary Weyl

equation and Cosserat elasticity", preprint http://arxiv.org/abs/1001.4726

Thu, 29 Apr 2010

12:00 - 13:00
SR1

An introduction to the Ricci flow

Maria Buzano
(Oxford)
Abstract

The aim of this talk is to get a feel for the Ricci flow. The Ricci flow was introduced by Hamilton in 1982 and was later used by Perelman to prove the Poincaré conjecture. We will introduce the notions of Ricci flow and Ricci soliton, giving simple examples in low dimension. We will also discuss briefly other types of geometric flows one can consider.

Wed, 28 Apr 2010

11:30 - 12:30
ChCh, Tom Gate, Room 2

Normal subsystems of fusion systems

David Craven
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

There are two competing notions for a normal subsystem of a (saturated) fusion system. A recent theorem of mine shows how the two notions are related. In this talk I will discuss normal subsystems and their properties, and give some ideas on why this might be useful or interesting.

Wed, 28 Apr 2010
11:30
L3

tba

Ivan Reilly
(Auckland)
Tue, 27 Apr 2010

17:00 - 18:00
L2

Hopf-Galois extensions and an exact sequence for H-Picard groups

Andrei Marcus
(Cluj)
Abstract

The topic of this talk is the representation theory of Hopf-Galois extensions. We consider the following questions.

Let H be a Hopf algebra, and A, B right H-comodule algebras. Assume that A and B are faithfully flat H-Galois extensions.

1. If A and B are Morita equivalent, does it follow that the subalgebras A^coH and B^coH of H-coinvariant elements are also Morita equivalent?

2. Conversely, if A^coH and B^coH are Morita equivalent, when does it follow that A and B are Morita equivalent?

As an application, we investigate H-Morita autoequivalences of the H-Galois extension A, introduce the concept of H-Picard group, and we establish an exact sequence linking the H-Picard group of A and

the Picard group of A^coH.(joint work with Stefaan Caenepeel)

Tue, 27 Apr 2010

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Isotopy of Lagrangian submanifolds

Jonny Evans
(Cambridge)
Abstract

Lagrangian submanifolds are an important class of objects in symplectic geometry. They arise in diverse settings: as vanishing cycles in complex algebraic geometry, as invariant sets in integrable systems, as Heegaard tori in Heegaard-Floer theory and of course as "branes" in the A-model of mirror symmetry. We ask the difficult question: when are two Lagrangian submanifolds isotopic? Restricting to the simplest case of Lagrangian spheres in rational surfaces we will give examples where this question has a complete answer. We will also give some very pictorial examples (due to Seidel) illustrating how two Lagrangians can fail to be isotopic.

Mon, 26 Apr 2010
15:45
L3

Higher string topology

David Ayala
(Copenhagen)
Abstract

The talk will begin with a brief account of the construction of string topology operations. I will point out some mysteries with the formulation of these operations, such as the role of (moduli) of surfaces, and pose some questions. The remainder of the talk will address these issues. In particular, I will sketch some ideas for a higher-dimensional version of string topology. For instance, (1) I will describe an E_{d+1} algebra structure on the (shifted) homology of the free mapping space H_*(Map(S^d,M^n)) and (2) I will outline how to obtain operations H_*(Map(P,M)) -> H_*(Map(Q,M)) indexes by a moduli space of zero-surgery data on a smooth d-manifold P with resulting surgered manifold Q.

Mon, 26 Apr 2010 13:00 -
Tue, 27 Apr 2010 14:00
SR1

Delzant and Potyagailo's hierarchical accessibility

Nicholas Touikan
(UQÀM)
Abstract

Take a group G and split it as the fundamental group of a graph of groups, then take the vertex groups and split them as fundamental groups of graphs of groups etc. If at some point you end up with a collection of unsplittable groups, then you have a hierarchy. Haken showed that for any 3-manifold M with an incompressible surface S, one can cut M along S and and then find other incompressible surfaces in M\S and cut again, and repeating this process one eventually obtains a collection of balls. Analogously, Delzant and Potyagailo showed that for any finitely presented group without 2-torsion and a certain sensible class E of subgroups of G, G admits a hierarchy where the edge groups of the splittings lie in E. I really like their proof and I will present it.