Mon, 03 Mar 2025
14:15
L5

Seiberg-Witten equations in all dimensions

Joel Fine
(Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB))
Abstract

I will describe a generalisation of the Seiberg-Witten equations to a Spin-c manifold of any dimension. The equations are for a U(1) connection A and spinor \phi and also an odd-degree differential form b (of inhomogeneous degree). Clifford action of the form is used to perturb the Dirac operator D_A. The first equation says that (D_A+b)(\phi)=0. The second equation involves the Weitzenböck remainder for D_A+b, setting it equal to q(\phi), where q(\phi) is the same quadratic term which appears in the usual Seiberg-Witten equations. This system is elliptic modulo gauge in dimensions congruent to 0,1 or 3 mod 4. In dimensions congruent to 2 mod 4 one needs to take two copies of the system, coupled via b. I will also describe a variant of these equations which make sense on manifolds with a Spin(7) structure. The most important difference with the familiar 3 and 4 dimensional stories is that compactness of the space of solutions is, for now at least, unclear. This is joint work with Partha Ghosh and, in the Spin(7) setting, Ragini Singhal.

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Applications close 5 pm, 19th January 2025

Multi-Grid Reaction-Diffusion Master Equation: Applications to Morphogen Gradient Modelling
Erban, R Winkelmann, S Bulletin of Mathematical Biology volume 87 issue 1 (27 Nov 2024)
Thu, 28 Nov 2024

11:00 - 12:00
TCC VC

Probability logic

Ehud Hrushovski
(University of Oxford)

"Can be a social event for employees, or can include a year-end review, bonuses, gifts, or other forms of recognition. They can be held at the workplace or off-site, and can involve the whole company or just certain teams or departments." (Google AI overview)

Well, there are no plans for reviews or bonuses or gifts, but we are good for everything else.

Oxford Mathematics Christmas Party, 12th December, 4pm, Common Room. All teams welcome.

Images of fruit reorientation at minus 72, 48, 24, and 1 h (left-to-right) to launch & images of seed dispersal at 2, 5, 10, and 20 ms (left-to-right) after abscission of the stem
A team of Oxford Mathematicians together with colleagues from the Oxford Botanic Garden and the University of Manchester has solved a mystery that has intrigued scientists for centuries. The squirting cucumber (Ecballium elaterium, from the Greek ‘ekballein,’ meaning to throw out) is named for the ballistic method the species uses to disperse its seeds. But how does it do it?
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