Wed, 19 Nov 2025
13:00
Quillen Room N3.12

The superconformal index

Oscar Lewis
Abstract

The superconformal index is one of the most powerful tools at the disposal of a supersymmetric field theorist. It counts protected states, is an RG flow invariant, and can be used to test for UV duality. Furthermore, it can be used to detect symmetry enhancements in the IR that are usually inaccessible by use of standard compactification or quiver techniques. The goal of this talk is to provide a practical introduction to computing indices. We will start with the supersymmetric harmonic oscillator to get some intuition, before building up a toolkit to compute indices for your favourite 4d N=1 SCFTs. Time permitting, we will discuss indices with N=2 supersymmetry.

Junior Strings is a seminar series where DPhil students present topics of common interest that do not necessarily overlap with their own research area. This is primarily aimed at PhD students and post-docs but everyone is welcome.

Tue, 02 Dec 2025

14:00 - 15:00
L4

Simultaneous generating sets for flags

Noah Kravitz
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

How many vectors are needed to simultaneously generate $m$ complete flags in $\mathbb{R}^d$, in the worst-case scenario?  A classical linear algebra fact, essentially equivalent to the Bruhat cell decomposition for $\text{GL}_d$, says that the answer is $d$ when $m=2$.  We obtain a precise answer for all values of $m$ and $d$.  Joint work with Federico Glaudo and Chayim Lowen.

Thu, 05 Feb 2026
16:00
Lecture Room 4

TBA

Tobias Berger
(University of Sheffield)
Thu, 29 Jan 2026
16:00
Lecture Room 4

TBA

Kevin Buzzard
(Imperial College London)
The 3d $A$-model and generalised symmetries, part I: Bosonic Chern-Simons theories
Closset, C Furrer, E Keyes, A Khlaif, O SciPost Physics volume 19 issue 4 (21 Oct 2025)
Fri, 28 Nov 2025
15:00
C6

The Gibbons-Hawking ansatz and hyper-Kähler quotients

Elvar Atlason
(UCL)
Abstract

 Hyper-Kähler manifolds are rigid geometric structures. They have three different symplectic and complex structures, in direct analogy with the quaternions. Being Ricci-flat, they solve the vacuum Einstein equations, and so there has been considerable interest among physicists to explicitly construct such spaces. We will discuss in detail the examples arising from the Gibbons-Hawking ansatz. These give concrete descriptions of the metric, giving many examples to work with. They also lead to the generalised classification as hyper-Kähler quotients by P.B. Kronheimer, with one such space for each finite subgroup of SU(2). Finally, we will look at the McKay correspondence, relating the finite subgroups of SU(2) with the simple Lie algebras of type A,D,E.

Thu, 04 Dec 2025

15:30 - 16:30
L5

TBA

Boris Baros
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

TBA

Thu, 27 Nov 2025

15:30 - 16:30
L5

TBA

Yadh Hafsi
(OMI visitor)
Abstract

TBA

Thu, 20 Nov 2025

15:00 - 16:00
L2

Global and local regression: a signature approach with applications

Prof. Christian Bayer
(Weierstrass Institute Berlin)
Abstract

The path signature is a powerful tool for solving regression problems on path space, i.e., for computing conditional expectations $\mathbb{E}[Y | X]$ when the random variable $X$ is a stochastic process -- or a time-series. We provide new theoretical convergence guarantees for two different, complementary approaches to regression using signature methods. In the context of global regression, we show that linear functionals of the robust signature are universal in the $L^p$ sense in a wide class of examples. In addition, we present a local regression method based on signature semi-metrics, and show universality as well as rates of convergence. 

 

Based on joint works with Davit Gogolashvili, Luca Pelizzari, and John Schoenmakers.

 

 

Please note: The MCF seminar usually takes place on Thursdays from 16:00 to 17:00 in L5. However, for this week, the timing will be changed to 15:00 to 16:00.

PhD positions are available in Computational Research, Data Science and Artificial Intelligence at the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ). DKFZ is Germany's largest biomedical research institute with its core site in Heidelberg, where computational scientists work at the forefront of AI and cancer research. They combine interdisciplinary approaches from computer science, medical informatics, physics, biology, bioinformatics and statistics to analyze and understand complex biological and medical data.

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