Thu, 13 Nov 2008

12:00 - 13:00
SR1

Introduction to G_2 geometry (Part II)

Spiro Karigiannis
(Oxford)
Abstract

I will give a survey-type introduction to manifolds equipped with $G_2$ structures, emphasizing the similarities and differences with Riemannian manifolds equipped with almost complex structures, and with oriented Riemannian 3-manifolds. Along the way I may discuss the Berger classification of Riemannian holonomy, the Calabi-Yau theorem, exceptional geometric structures arising from the algebra of the Octonions, and calibrated submanifolds. This talk is the second of two parts.

Thu, 13 Nov 2008
11:00
DH 3rd floor SR

QUAGMIRE

Judy Simpson
(Oxford)
Wed, 12 Nov 2008
16:00
L3

'Two-point sets and the Axiom of Choice'.

Ben Chad
(Oxford)
Abstract

'A two-point set is a subset of the plane which meets every line in exactly two points. The existence of two-point sets was shown by Mazurkiewicz in 1914, and the main open problem concerning these objects is to determine if there exist Borel two-point sets. If this question has a positive answer, then we most likely need to be able to construct a two-point set without making use of a well-ordering of the real line, as is currently the usual technique.

We discuss recent work by Robin Knight, Rolf Suabedissen and the speaker, and (independently) by Arnold Miller, which show that it is consistent with ZF that the real line cannot be well-ordered and also that two-point sets exist.'

Wed, 12 Nov 2008

10:45 - 11:45
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Compatibility conditions for the Left Cauchy Green Tensor field in 3-D

Amit Acharya
(Carnegie Mellon University)
Abstract

The question of local existence of a deformation of a simply connected body whose Left Cauchy Green Tensor matches a prescribed, symmetric, positive definite tensor field is considered. A sufficient condition is deduced after formulation as a problem in Riemannian Geometry. The compatibility condition ends up being surprisingly different from that of compatibility of a Right Cauchy Green Tensor field, a fact that becomes evident after the geometric formulation. The question involves determining conditions for the local existence of solutions to an overdetermined system of Pfaffian PDEs with algebraic constraints that is typically not completely integrable.

Mon, 10 Nov 2008
15:45
Oxford-Man Institute

Self-organised criticality in mean field random graph models

Mr. Balazs Rath
(Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
Abstract

We modify the usual Erdos-Renyi random graph evolution by letting connected clusters 'burn down' (i.e. fall apart to disconnected single sites) due to a Poisson flow of lightnings. In a range of the intensity of rate of lightnings, the system sticks to a permanent critical state (i.e. exhibits so-called self-organised critical behaviour). The talk will be based on joint work with Balint Toth.

Mon, 10 Nov 2008
15:45
L3

Fibrations with non-commutative fibres

Siegfried Echterhoff
(Goettingen)
Abstract

We study non-commutative analogues of Serre-ï¬~Abrations in topology. We shall present several examples of such ï¬~Abrations and give applications for the computation of the K-theory of certain C*-algebras. (Joint work with Ryszard Nest and Herve Oyono-Oyono.)

Mon, 10 Nov 2008
14:15
L3

A K-theoretic codimension 2 obstruction to positive scalar curvature

Thomas Schick
(Goettingen)
Abstract

Let M be a closed spin manifold.

Gromov and Lawson have shown that the presence of certain "enlargeable"

submanifolds of codimension 2 is an obstruction to the existence of a Riemannian metric with positive scalar curvature on M.

In joint work with Hanke, we refine the geoemtric condition of

"enlargeability": it suffices that a K-theoretic index obstruction of the submanifold doesn't vanish.

A "folk conjecture" asserts that all index type obstructions to positive scalar curvature should be read off from the corresponding index for the ambient manifold M (this this is equivalent to a small part of the strong Novikov conjecture). We address this question for the obstruction above and discuss partial results.

Mon, 10 Nov 2008
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Geometric estimates for the uniform spanning forest

Dr. Antal Jarai
(Bath)
Abstract

The uniform spanning forest (USF) in a graph

is a random spanning forest obtained as the limit of uniformly chosen spanning

trees on finite subgraphs. The USF is known to have stochastic dimension 4 on

graphs that are "at least 4 dimensional" in a certain sense. In this

talk I will look at more detailed estimates on the geometry of a fixed

component of the USF in the special case of the d-dimensional integer lattice,

d > 4. This is motivated in part by the study of random walk restricted to a

fixed component of the USF.

Mon, 10 Nov 2008

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Non-Kahler Ricci solitons

Andrew Dancer
(Oxford)
Abstract
Abstract:  We produce new examples of steady and expanding Ricci solitons which are not of Kahler type.
Fri, 07 Nov 2008
16:30
L1

Random walks in random environments

Professor Ofer Zeitouni
(University of Minnesota and Weizmann Institute of Israel)
Abstract

A random environment (in Z^d) is a collection of (random) transition probabilities, indexed by sites. Perform now a random walk using these transitions. This model is easy to describe, yet presents significant challenges to analysis. In particular, even elementary questions concerning long term behavior, such as the existence of a law of large numbers, are open. I will review in this talk the model, its history, and recent advance, focusing on examples of unexpected behavior.

Fri, 07 Nov 2008
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Pricing and Hedging Basket Options to prespecified levels of Acceptability

Dilip Madan
(Maryland)
Abstract

Stress levels embedded in S&P 500 options are constructed and re-ported. The stress function used is MINMAXV AR: Seven joint laws for the top 50 stocks in the index are considered. The first time changes a Gaussian one factor copula. The remaining six employ correlated Brownian motion independently time changed in each coordinate. Four models use daily returns, either run as Lévy processes or scaled, to the option maturity. The last two employ risk neutral marginals from the V GSSD and CGMY SSD Sato processes. The smallest stress function uses CGMY SSD risk neutral marginals and Lévy correlation. Running the Lévy process yields a lower stress surface than scaling to the option maturity. Static hedging of basket options to a particular level of accept- ability is shown to substantially lower the price at which the basket option may be o¤ered.

Fri, 07 Nov 2008
10:00
DH 1st floor SR

Magma fragmentation

Betty Scheu
(University of Munich)
Thu, 06 Nov 2008
16:00
L3

"Annihilating Ideals for Class Groups of Number Fields"

David Solomon
(Kings College London)
Abstract

"Stickelberger's famous theorem (from 1890) gives an explicit ideal which annihilates the imaginary part of the class group of an abelian field as a module for the group-ring of the Galois group. In the 1980s Tate and Brumer proposed a generalisation of Stickelberger's Theorem (and his ideal) to other abelian extensions of number fields, the so-called `Brumer-Stark conjecture'.

I shall discuss some of the many unresolved issues connected with the annihilation of class groups of number fields. For instance, should the (generalised) Stickelberger ideal be the full annihilator, the Fitting ideal or what? And what can we say in the plus part (where Stickelberger's Theorem is trivial)?"

Thu, 06 Nov 2008

14:30 - 15:30
L3

q-Schur algebras, Wedderburn decomposition and James' conjecture

Max Neunhoeffer
(St Andrews)
Abstract

In this talk we present a new construction of a Wedderburn basis for

the generic q-Schur algebra using the Du-Kazhdan-Lusztig basis. We show

that this gives rise to a new view on the Du-Lusztig homomorphism to the

asymptotic algebra. At the end we explain a potential plan for an attack

on James' conjecture using a reformulation by Meinolf Geck.

The talk starts with a gentle recollection of facts about

Iwahori-Hecke-Algebras of type A and q-Schur algebras and aims to be

accessible to people who are not (yet) experts in the representation

theory of q-Schur algebras.

All this is joint work with Olivier Brunat (Bochum).

Thu, 06 Nov 2008

14:00 - 15:00
Comlab

Asymptotics and complex singularities of the Lorenz attractor

Prof Divakar Viswanath
(University of Michigan, USA)
Abstract

The butterfly-shaped Lorenz attractor is a fractal set made up of infinitely many periodic orbits. Ever since Lorenz (1963) introduced a system of three simple ordinary differential equations, much of the discussion of his system and its strange attractor has adopted a dynamical point of view. In contrast, we allow time to be a complex variable and look upon such solutions of the Lorenz system as analytic functions. Formal analysis gives the form and coefficients of the complex singularities of the Lorenz system. Very precise (> 500 digits) numerical computations show that the periodic orbits of the Lorenz system have singularities which obey that form exactly or very nearly so. Both formal analysis and numerical computation suggest that the mathematical analysis of the Lorenz system is a problem in analytic function theory. (Joint work with S. Sahutoglu).

Thu, 06 Nov 2008

12:30 - 13:30
Gibson 1st Floor SR

On the existence of extreme waves and the Stokes conjecture with vorticity

Eugen Varvaruca
(Imperial College)
Abstract

We present some recent results on singular solutions of the problem of travelling gravity water waves on flows with vorticity. We show that, for a certain class of vorticity functions, a sequence of regular waves converges to an extreme wave with stagnation points at its crests. We also show that, for any vorticity function, the profile of an extreme wave must have either a symmetric corner of 120 degrees or a horizontal tangent at any isolated stagnation point. Moreover, the profile necessarily has a symmetric corner of 120 degrees if the vorticity is nonnegative near the free surface.