Congratulations to the following graduate students:
Jad Hamdan - for his contributions to the Random Matrix Theory group through supporting and welcoming visitors, organising social events, and helping foster a collegial and inclusive group culture. He has also been a dependable source of support for junior members and an active contributor to seminars, group dinners, and wider group life.
12:00
The exceptional holography of the M5-brane
Abstract
The characterisation of the physics of the M5-brane remains an important open problem in string theory. While the superconformal field theory that resides on a planar M5-brane in flat space is poorly understood, other configurations involving M5-branes wrapped on certain manifolds have well-known superconformal field theory descriptions, including class S field theories. In this talk, I will use new methods based on exceptional generalised geometry to describe the gravity duals of class S field theories, compute a universal sector of their light-operator spectrum, and provide, for the first time, a holographic match of their superconformal index.
13:00
TDA for drug discovery: Cyclic molecule generation with topological guidance
Abstract
Drug discovery is slow and expensive, and a growing body of AI work tackles this by training generative models that propose new candidate molecules directly, searching chemical space far faster than a human chemist could. Most of this work has focused on standard small molecules, leaving more specialized but valuable classes underexplored.
Macrocycles are ring-shaped molecules that offer a promising alternative to small-molecule drugs due to their enhanced selectivity and binding affinity against difficult targets. Despite their chemical value, they remain underexplored in generative modeling, likely owing to their scarcity in public datasets and the challenges of enforcing topological constraints in standard deep generative models.
We introduce MacroGuide: Topological Guidance for Macrocycle Generation, a diffusion guidance mechanism that uses Persistent Homology to steer the sampling of pretrained molecular generative models toward the generation of macrocycles, in both unconditional and conditional (protein pocket) settings. At each denoising step, MacroGuide constructs a Vietoris-Rips complex from atomic positions and promotes ring formation by optimizing persistent homology features. Empirically, applying MacroGuide to pretrained diffusion models increases macrocycle generation rates from 1% to 99%, while matching or exceeding state-of-the-art performance on key quality metrics such as chemical validity, diversity, and PoseBusters checks.
Accepted to ICML 2026. Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.14977
face coverings for virus
protection
It's quiz time. Gather your team - or join one on the night - and come on down (or up) to the Common Room. There will be pizza and drinks for all, and prizes for the winning team.
Harry Stuart has once again written the quiz. For those of you who weren't at the department quiz in late 2023, you can expect a fun, general knowledge quiz with some extra puzzle-like elements to keep things interesting.
13:00
Generic irreducibility of Laplace eigenspaces with finite symmetry
Abstract
I will report on a joint work in progress with Egor Morozov proving that for generic elements in several families of Laplace-type operators invariant under a finite group action, all eigenspaces are irreducible representations. In particular, for the case of Laplace-Beltrami operators, this provides a natural generalization of Uhlenbeck's result on the generic simplicity of the spectrum to the equivariant setting. Moreover, this extends previous work of Zelditch and solves the finite group case of a well-known question raised by Guillemin and Yau. For Schrödinger operators, our results rigorously underpin the notion of accidental degeneracy for certain quantum-mechanical systems with finite symmetry. Our approach involves modern methods of equivariant transversality which we extend to higher dimensions.