Wed, 03 Feb 2021

16:00 - 17:30
Virtual

Stationary reflection at successors of singular cardinals

Spencer Unger
(University of Toronto)
Abstract

We survey some recent progress in understanding stationary reflection at successors of singular cardinals and its influence on cardinal arithmetic:

1) In joint work with Yair Hayut, we reduced the consistency strength of stationary reflection at $\aleph_{\omega+1}$ to an assumption weaker than $\kappa$ is $\kappa^+$ supercompact.

2) In joint work with Yair Hayut and Omer Ben-Neria, we prove that from large cardinals it is consistent that there is a singular cardinal $\nu$ of uncountable cofinality where the singular cardinal hypothesis fails at nu and every collection of fewer than $\mathrm{cf}(\nu)$ stationary subsets of $\nu^+$ reflects at a common point.

The statement in the second theorem was not previously known to be consistent. These results make use of analysis of Prikry generic objects over iterated ultrapowers.

Wed, 20 Jan 2021

16:00 - 17:30
Virtual

Iteration, reflection, and singular cardinals

Dima Sinapova
(University of Illinois at Chicago)
Abstract

Two classical results of Magidor are: 

(1) from large cardinals it is consistent to have reflection at $\aleph_{\omega+1}$, and 

(2) from large cardinals it is consistent to have the failure of SCH at $\aleph_\omega$.

These principles are at odds with each other. The former is a compactness type principle. (Compactness is the phenomenon where if a certain property holds for every smaller substructure of an object, then it holds for the entire object.) In contrast, failure of SCH is an instance of incompactness. The natural question is whether we can have both of these simultaneously. We show the answer is yes.

We describe a Prikry style iteration, and use it to force stationary reflection in the presence of not SCH.  Then we obtain this situation at $\aleph_\omega$. This is joint work with Alejandro Poveda and Assaf Rinot.

Tue, 09 Mar 2021
14:00
Virtual

Tail asymptotics for extinction times of self-similar fragmentations

Bénédicte Haas
(Paris 13)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

Self-similar fragmentation processes are random models for particles that are subject to successive fragmentations. When the index of self-similarity is negative the fragmentations intensify as the masses of particles decrease. This leads to a shattering phenomenon, where the initial particle is entirely reduced to dust - a set of zero-mass particles - in finite time which is what we call the extinction time. Equivalently, these extinction times may be seen as heights of continuous compact rooted trees or scaling limits of heights of sequences of discrete trees. Our objective is to set up precise bounds for the large time asymptotics of the tail distributions of these extinction times.

Tue, 02 Mar 2021
15:30
Virtual

The uniform spanning tree in 4 dimensions

Perla Sousi
(Cambridge)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

A uniform spanning tree of $\mathbb{Z}^4$ can be thought of as the "uniform measure" on trees of $\mathbb{Z}^4$. The past of 0 in the uniform spanning tree is the finite component that is disconnected from infinity when 0 is deleted from the tree. We establish the logarithmic corrections to the probabilities that the past contains a path of length $n$, that it has volume at least $n$ and that it reaches the boundary of the box of side length $n$ around 0. Dimension 4 is the upper critical dimension for this model in the sense that in higher dimensions it exhibits "mean-field" critical behaviour. An important part of our proof is the study of the Newtonian capacity of a loop erased random walk in 4 dimensions. This is joint work with Tom Hutchcroft.

Tue, 02 Mar 2021
14:00
Virtual

Sparse expanders have negative Ollivier-Ricci curvature

Justin Salez
(Université Paris-Dauphine)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

We prove that bounded-degree expanders with non-negative Ollivier-Ricci curvature do not exist, thereby solving a long-standing open problem suggested by Naor and Milman and publicized by Ollivier (2010). In fact, this remains true even if we allow for a vanishing proportion of large degrees, large eigenvalues, and negatively-curved edges. To establish this, we work directly at the level of Benjamini-Schramm limits. More precisely, we exploit the entropic characterization of the Liouville property on stationary random graphs to show that non-negative curvature and spectral expansion are incompatible 'at infinity'. We then transfer this result to finite graphs via local weak convergence and a relative compactness argument. We believe that this 'local weak limit' approach to mixing properties of Markov chains will have many other applications.

Tue, 16 Feb 2021
14:00
Virtual

Geodesic Geometry on Graphs

Nati Linial
(Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

We investigate a graph theoretic analog of geodesic geometry. In a graph $G=(V,E)$ we consider a system of paths $P=\{P_{u,v}| u,v\in V\}$ where $P_{u,v}$ connects vertices $u$ and $v$. This system is consistent in that if vertices $y,z$ are in $P_{u,v}$, then the sub-path of $P_{u,v}$ between them coincides with $P_{y,z}$. A map $w:E\to(0,\infty)$ is said to induce $P$ if for every $u,v\in V$ the path $P_{u,v}$ is $w$-geodesic. We say that $G$ is metrizable if every consistent path system is induced by some such $w$. As we show, metrizable graphs are very rare, whereas there exist infinitely many 2-connected metrizable graphs.
 

Tue, 09 Feb 2021
15:30
Virtual

Product structure theory and its applications

Vida Dujmović
(Ottawa)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

I will introduce product structure theory of graphs and show how families of graphs that have such a structure admit short adjacency labeling scheme and small induced universal graphs. Time permitting, I will talk about another recent application of product structure theory, namely vertex ranking (coloring).

Tue, 02 Feb 2021
14:00
Virtual

On the extension complexity of low-dimensional polytopes

Lisa Sauermann
(IAS)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

It is sometimes possible to represent a complicated polytope as a projection of a much simpler polytope. To quantify this phenomenon, the extension complexity of a polytope $P$ is defined to be the minimum number of facets in a (possibly higher-dimensional) polytope from which $P$ can be obtained as a (linear) projection. In this talk, we discuss some results on the extension complexity of random $d$-dimensional polytopes (obtained as convex hulls of random points on either on the unit sphere or in the unit ball), and on the extension complexity of polygons with all vertices on a common circle. Joint work with Matthew Kwan and Yufei Zhao

Tue, 26 Jan 2021
15:30
Virtual

Random friends walking on random graphs

Noga Alon
(Princeton)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

Let $X$ and $Y$ be two $n$-vertex graphs. Identify the vertices of $Y$ with $n$ people, any two of whom are either friends or strangers (according to the edges and non-edges in $Y$), and imagine that these people are standing one at each vertex of $X$. At each point in time, two friends standing at adjacent vertices of $X$ may swap places, but two strangers may not. The friends-and-strangers graph $FS(X,Y)$ has as its vertex set the collection of all configurations of people standing on the vertices of $X$, where two configurations are adjacent when they are related via a single friendly swap. This provides a common generalization for the famous 15-puzzle, transposition Cayley graphs of symmetric groups, and early work of Wilson and of Stanley.
I will describe several recent results and open problems addressing the extremal and typical aspects of the notion, focusing on the result that the threshold probability for connectedness of $FS(X,Y)$ for two independent binomial random graphs $X$ and $Y$ in $G(n,p)$ is $p=p(n)=n-1/2+o(1)$.
Joint work with Colin Defant and Noah Kravitz.

Tue, 26 Jan 2021
14:00
Virtual

A solution to Erdős and Hajnal's odd cycle problem

Richard Montgomery
(Birmingham)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

I will discuss how to construct cycles of many different lengths in graphs, in particular answering the following two problems on odd and even cycles. Erdős and Hajnal asked in 1981 whether the sum of the reciprocals of the odd cycle lengths in a graph diverges as the chromatic number increases, while, in 1984, Erdős asked whether there is a constant $C$ such that every graph with average degree at least $C$ contains a cycle whose length is a power of 2.

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