Thu, 25 Jun 2026

12:00 - 13:00
C1

Global Well-Posedness for Prandtl-Type Boundary Layer Models

Anita Yang
(The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Abstract

In this talk, we study some Prandtl-type boundary layer models, including the two-dimensional MHD boundary layer equations and the Prandtl–Shercliff model. For small perturbations of a tangential background magnetic field, we establish the global-in-time existence and uniqueness of solutions to the MHD boundary layer equations in Sobolev spaces. The proof relies on a novel combination of the well-known cancellation mechanism and the concept of linearly good unknowns. We also investigate the Prandtl–Shercliff model. In the two-dimensional case, we establish global-in-time well-posedness in Sobolev spaces without imposing any structural assumptions on the initial data. Moreover, we show that solutions exhibit a global analytic regularization effect in all variables, up to the boundary and for all times. The proofs rely crucially on the intrinsic nonlocal diffusion induced by the Shercliff boundary layer.

Today sees the pilot launch of Oxford Unbounded, our free online mentoring programme to help students achieve top grades at Maths GCSE/National 5s. Teachers at selected schools across the UK, with a high proportion of students from backgrounds underrepresented at Oxford, have been invited to nominate students in Year 10 (or equivalent).

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Ben Green and Alex Scott have been awarded European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grants. The grants are one of the most prestigious and competitive research awards in the world, providing long-term funding to well-established, leading scientists and scholars who wish to pursue groundbreaking, high-risk projects that push the frontiers of knowledge. 

Dualities and trialities in $$ \mathcal{N} $$ = 2 supersymmetric gauged quantum mechanics
Closset, C Wynne, J Journal of High Energy Physics volume 2026 issue 6 (05 Jun 2026)
The Neural Tangent Kernel for Classification
Plenk, J Calvo-Ordonez, S Cartea, A Gal, Y van der Wilk, M Ciosek, K (22 May 2026)
Thu, 25 Jun 2026

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 4

Temporal high-order structure-preserving parametric finite element methods for curvature flows

Prof Chunmei Su
(Tsinghua University)
Abstract

Professor  Chunmei Su will talk about: 'Temporal high-order structure-preserving parametric finite element methods for curvature flows'

 

The quality of the mesh is crucial for simulating curvature flows, as standard approaches may fail due to mesh distortion. We first present a series of high-order parametric finite element methods based on the Barrett-Garcke--Nurnberg formulation for solving various types of flows involving curves and surfaces. Extensive numerical experiments demonstrate the anticipated high-order accuracy while maintaining favorable mesh quality throughout the evolution process. Secondly, for flows involving multiple geometric structures, such as surface diffusion—which reduces area while preserving volume—we propose a type of structure-preserving method that incorporates two scalar Lagrange multipliers along with two evolution equations related to area and volume, respectively. These schemes effectively preserve the geometric structure at a fully discrete level. Comprehensive numerical experiments illustrate that our methods achieve the desired temporal accuracy, while simultaneously preserving the geometric structure of the surface diffusion.
 

Modeling flying formations as flow-mediated matter
Mavroyiakoumou, C Wu, J Ristroph, L Physical Review Fluids volume 11 issue 6 (18 Jun 2026)
Thu, 05 Nov 2026
14:00

TBA

Sara Shashaani
(North Carolina State University)
Abstract

TBA; the speaker is visiting during term and this date can be flexible. 

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