Professor Colbrook is going to talk about: 'A Computational Framework for Infinite-Dimensional Nonlinear Spectral Problems'
Nonlinear spectral problems -- where the spectral parameter enters operator families nonlinearly -- arise in many areas of analysis and applications, yet a systematic computational theory in infinite dimensions remains incomplete. In this talk, I present a unified framework based on a solve-then-discretise philosophy (familiar, for example, from Chebfun!), ensuring that truncation preserves convergence. The setting accommodates unbounded operators, including differential operators with spectral-parameter-dependent boundary conditions.
In the first part, I introduce a provably convergent method for computing spectra and pseudospectra under the minimal assumption of gap-metric continuity of operator graphs -- the weakest natural setting in which the resolvent norm remains continuous.
In the second part, I develop a contour-based framework for discrete spectra of holomorphic operator families, with a complete analysis of stability, convergence, and randomised sketching based on Gaussian probes. This perspective unifies and extends many existing contour integral methods. Examples throughout highlight practical effectiveness and subtle phenomena unique to infinite dimensions, including the perhaps unexpected sensitivity to probe selection when seeking to avoid spectral pollution.