A simulation modeling framework for fluid motion and transport in a rocking bioreactor with application to cultivated meat production
Kim, M Harris, D Cimpeanu, R (07 Apr 2025)
On Inverse Problems for Two-Dimensional Steady Supersonic Euler Flows past Curved Wedges
Chen, G Pu, Y Zhang, Y Inverse Problems (04 Apr 2025)
Uncovering flow and deformation regimes in the coupled fluid-solid
vestibular system
Chico-Vázquez, J Moulton, D Vella, D (08 Apr 2025) http://arxiv.org/abs/2504.06394v1
Localization of deformation in the central hub of hub-and-spoke kirigami
Barckicke, J Domino, L Zhang, Q Liu, M Vella, D (09 Apr 2025) http://arxiv.org/abs/2504.06626v1
Wed, 18 Jun 2025
16:00
L6

TBA

Julian Wykowski
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

TBA

Wed, 11 Jun 2025
16:00
L5

TBA

Gabriel Corrigan
(University of Glasgow)
Abstract

TBA

Wed, 04 Jun 2025
16:00
L6

TBA

Filippo Baroni
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

TBA

Wed, 28 May 2025
16:00
L6

TBA

Alex Epelde Blanco
(Harvard University)
Abstract

TBA

Wed, 21 May 2025
16:00
L2

Fat minors and where to find them

Joseph MacManus
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Recently, much attention has been paid to the intersection between coarse geometry and graph theory, giving rise to the fresh, exciting new field aptly known as ‘coarse graph theory’. One aspect of this area is the study of so-called ‘fat minors’, a large-scale analogue of the usual idea of a graph minor.

In this talk, I will introduce this area and motivate some interesting questions and conjectures. I will then sketch a proof that a finitely presented group is either virtually planar or contains arbitrarily ‘fat’ copies of every finite graph.

No prior knowledge or passion for graph theory will be assumed in this talk.

Wed, 14 May 2025
16:00
L6

Coarse cohomology of metric spaces and quasimorphisms

William Thomas
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

In this talk, we give an accessible introduction to the theory of coarse cohomology of metric spaces in the sense of Margolis, which we present in direct analogy with group cohomology for discrete groups. We explain how this yields the robust notion of coarse cohomological dimension (due to Margolis), which is a genuine quasi-isometry invariant of metric spaces generalising the cohomological dimension of groups when the latter is finite. We then give applications to geometric properties of quasimorphisms and motivate how such considerations might be useful in the setting of non-positively curved groups. This is joint reading/work with Paula Heim.

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