A Gapless Phase with Haagerup Symmetry
Bottini, L Schafer-Nameki, S (24 Oct 2024)

The School of Mathematics of the University of Edinburgh and Public Health Scotland invite you to participate in the Edinburgh Undergraduate Operational Research Challenge. The challenge is to design a solution for a practical problem using operational research. If you are interested in using numerate techniques to solve practical problems and enable decision-makers to execute better decisions and make a difference for society, then this challenge is for you!

AOPP are holding an Online Open Day on Tuesday 3rd December 2024 from 13:30-16:00.

Find out more about DPhil (PhD) opportunities in the Atmospheric, Oceanic & Planetary Physics sub-department at the University of Oxford. Join us to meet supervisors as well as some of our postdocs, and hear brief talks on their research. There will also be drop-in sessions with supervisors and current students, with ample opportunity for you to ask questions.

Discovering neutrino tridents at the Large Hadron Collider
Altmannshofer, W Mäkelä, T Sarkar, S Trojanowski, S Xie, K Zhou, B Physical Review D volume 110 issue 7 072018 (28 Oct 2024)
Tue, 12 Nov 2024

13:00 - 14:00
L3

Mathematrix: Short Talks by Postgraduates

Abstract

Come along to hear from several PhD students and PostDocs about their research. There will also be a Q&A about doing a Master's/PhD and a chance to mingle with postgraduate students. 

Speakers include:

  • Shaked Bader, DPhil Student in Geometric Group Theory, 
  • Eoin Hurley, PostDoc in Combinatorics, 
  • Patricia Lamirande, DPhil Student in Mathematical Biology
Fri, 08 Nov 2024
16:00
L1

North meets South: ECR Colloquium

Paul-Hermann Balduf and Marc Suñé
Abstract

North meets South is a tradition founded by and for early-career researchers. One speaker from the North of the Andrew Wiles Building and one speaker from the South each present an idea from their work in an accessible yet intriguing way. 


North Wing

Speaker: Paul-Hermann Balduf
Title: Statistics of Feynman integral
Abstract: In quantum field theory, one way to compute predictions for physical observables is perturbation theory, which means that the sought-after quantity is expressed as a formal power series in some coupling parameter. The coefficients of the power series are Feynman integrals, which are, in general, very complicated functions of the masses and momenta involved in the physical process. However, there is also a complementary difficulty: A higher orders, millions of distinct Feynman integrals contribute to the same series coefficient.

My talk concerns the statistical properties of Feynman integrals, specifically for phi^4 theory in 4 dimensions. I will demonstrate that the Feynman integrals under consideration follow a fairly regular distribution which is almost unchanged for higher orders in perturbation theory. The value of a given Feynman integral is correlated with many properties of the underlying Feynman graph, which can be used for efficient importance sampling of Feynman integrals. Based on 2305.13506 and 2403.16217.


South Wing

Speaker: Marc Suñé 
Title: Extreme mechanics of thin elastic objects
Abstract: Exceptionally hard --- or soft -- materials, materials that are active and response to different stimuli, elastic objects that undergo large deformations; the advances in the recent decades in robotics, 3D printing and, more broadly, in materials engineering, have created a new world of opportunities to test the (extreme) mechanics of solids. 

In this colloquium I will focus on the elastic instabilities of slender objects. In particular, I will discuss the transverse actuation of a stretched elastic sheet. This problem is a peculiar example of buckling under tension and it has a vast potential scope of applications, from understanding the mechanics of graphene and cell tissues, to the engineering of meta-materials.

 

Fridays@4 presents North Meets South ECR Colloquium. Friday 8 November, 4pm in L1
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