Quantomatic: A Proof Assistant for Diagrammatic Reasoning
Kissinger, A Zamdzhiev, V Lecture Notes in Computer Science volume 9195 326-336 (25 Jul 2015)
Tensors, !-graphs, and Non-commutative Quantum Structures
Kissinger, A Quick, D New Generation Computing volume 34 issue 1-2 87-123 (04 Mar 2016)
Deep learning generalizes because the parameter-function map is biased towards simple functions
Pérez, G Louis, A Camargo, C 7th International Conference on Learning Representations, ICLR 2019 (01 Jan 2019)
Tue, 05 Nov 2019

14:15 - 15:15
L4

Axiomatizability and profinite groups

Dan Segal
(Oxford University)
Abstract

A mathematical structure is `axiomatizable' if it is completely determined by some family of sentences in a suitable first-order language. This idea has been explored for various kinds of structure, but I will concentrate on groups. There are some general results (not many) about which groups are or are not axiomatizable; recently there has been some interest in the sharper concept of 'finitely axiomatizable' or FA - that is, when only a finite set of sentences (equivalently, a single sentence) is allowed.

While an infinite group cannot be FA, every finite group is so, obviously. A profinite group is kind of in between: it is infinite (indeed, uncountable), but compact as a topological group; and these groups share many properties of finite groups, though sometimes for rather subtle reasons. I will discuss some recent work with Andre Nies and Katrin Tent where we prove that certain kinds of profinite group are FA among profinite groups. The methods involve a little model theory, and quite a lot of group theory.

 

Tue, 22 Oct 2019
14:15
L4

Representations associated to gradations of colour Lie algebras

Philippe Meyer
(Oxford University)
Abstract

The notion of colour Lie algebra, introduced by Ree (1960), generalises notions of Lie algebra and Lie superalgebra. From an orthogonal representation V of a quadratic colour Lie algebra g, we give various ways of constructing a colour Lie algebra g’ whose bracket extends the bracket of g and the action of g on V. A first possibility is to consider g’=g⊕V and requires the cancellation of an invariant studied by Kostant (1999). Another construction is possible when the representation is ``special’’ and in this case the extension is of the form g’=g⊕sl(2,k)⊕V⊗k^2. Covariants are associated to special representations and satisfy to particular identities generalising properties studied by Mathews (1911) on binary cubics. The 7-dimensional fundamental representation of a Lie algebra of type G_2 and the 8-dimensional spinor representation of a Lie algebra of type so(7) are examples of special representations.

The division of labour between community medicine distributors influences the reach of mass drug administration: A cross-sectional study in rural Uganda
Chami, G Kabatereine, N Tukahebwa, E PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases volume 13 issue 9 (04 Sep 2019)
Reversible signal transmission in an active mechanical metamaterial
Browning, A Woodhouse, F Simpson, M Proceedings of the Royal Society A volume 475 issue 2227 20190146 (24 Jul 2019)
Economic instruments for obesity prevention: results of a scoping review and modified delphi survey
Faulkner, G Grootendorst, P Nguyen, V Andreyeva, T Arbour-Nicitopoulos, K Auld, M Cash, S Cawley, J Donnelly, P Drewnowski, A Dubé, L Ferrence, R Janssen, I LaFrance, J Lakdawalla, D Mendelsen, R Powell, L Traill, W Windmeijer, F International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity volume 8 issue 1 109 (06 Oct 2011)
Fri, 25 Oct 2019

17:30 - 18:30
L1

Jon Chapman - Waves and resonance: from musical instruments to vacuum cleaners, via metamaterials and invisibility cloaks

Jon Chapman
(University of Oxford)
Further Information

Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures 

Jon Chapman - Waves and resonance: from musical instruments to vacuum cleaners, via metamaterials and invisibility cloaks.

Friday 25 October 2019

5.30pm-6.30pm, Mathematical Institute, Oxford

Please email @email to register.

Watch live:
https://facebook.com/OxfordMathematics
https://livestream.com/oxuni/chapman

Jon Chapman is Professor of Mathematics and its Applications in Oxford.

The Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures are generously supported by XTX Markets.

Subscribe to