Tue, 29 Jan 2019

14:00 - 14:30
L3

Dimensionality reduction for linear least square problems

Zhen Shao
(Oxford)
Abstract

The focus of this talk is how to tackle huge linear least square problems via sketching, a dimensionality reduction technique from randomised numerical linear algebra. The technique allows us to project the huge problem to a smaller dimension that captures essential information of the original problem. We can then solve the projected problem directly to obtain a low accuracy solution or using the projected problem to construct a preconditioner for the original problem to obtain a high accuracy solution. I will survey the existing projection techniques and evaluate the performance of sketching for linear least square problems by comparing it to the state-of-the-art traditional solution methods. More than ten-fold speed-up has been observed in some cases.

Tue, 22 Jan 2019

14:30 - 15:00
L5

Shape optimization with finite elements

Alberto Paganini
(Oxford)
Abstract

A common strategy to solve shape optimization problems is to select an initial domain and to update it iteratively until it satisfies certain optimality crietria. In the presence of PDE-constraints, computing these updates requires solving a boundary value problem on a domain that changes at every iteration. We explain how to use isoparametric finite elements to tackle this issue. We also show how finite elements allow computing these updates without deriving shape derivative formulas by hand.

Tue, 07 May 2019

15:30 - 16:30
L4

Toric degenerations of Grassmannians

Fatemeh Mohammadi
(Bristol)
Abstract

Many toric degenerations and integrable systems of the Grassmannians Gr(2, n) are described by trees, or equivalently subdivisions of polygons. These degenerations can also be seen to arise from the cones of the tropicalisation of the Grassmannian. In this talk, I focus on particular combinatorial types of cones in tropical Grassmannians Gr(k,n) and prove a necessary condition for such an initial degeneration to be toric. I will present several combinatorial conjectures and computational challenges around this problem.  This is based on joint works with Kristin Shaw and with Oliver Clarke.

Mon, 28 Jan 2019
12:45
L5

Unveiling the mysteries of the E-string with Calabi-Yau geometry

Yinan Wang
(Oxford)
Abstract

The E-string theory is usually considered as the simplest among 6D (1,0) superconformal field theories. Nonetheless, we still have little information about its spectrum of operators. In this talk, I'm going to describe our recent geometric approach using F-theory compactification on an elliptic Calabi-Yau threefold. The elliptic fibration is non-flat, which means that there are complex surface components in the fiber direction. From the geometry of non-flat fiber, we read out an infinite tower of particle states in the E-string theory. I will also discuss its relevance to 4D standard model building, which is a main motivation of this work.
 

Tue, 19 Nov 2019

15:30 - 16:30
L4

3264 Conics in A Second

Bernd Sturmfels
(Berkeley and MPI Leipzig)
Abstract

Enumerative algebraic geometry counts the solutions to certain geometric constraints. Numerical algebraic geometry determines these solutions for any given 
instance. This lecture illustrates how these two fields complement each other, especially in the light of emerging new applications. We start with a gem from
the 19th century, namely the 3264 conics that are tangent to five given conics in the plane. Thereafter we turn to current problems in statistics, with focus on 
maximum likelihood estimation for linear Gaussian covariance models.
 

All-Sky Measurement of the Anisotropy of Cosmic Rays at 10 TeV and
Mapping of the Local Interstellar Magnetic Field
Collaboration, H Abeysekara, A Alfaro, R Alvarez, C Álvarez, J Arceo, R Arteaga-Velázquez, J Rojas, D Belmont-Moreno, E BenZvi, S Brisbois, C Capistrán, T Carramiñana, A Casanova, S Cotti, U Cotzomi, J Díaz-Vélez, J León, C Fuente, E Dichiara, S DuVernois, M Espinoza, C Fiorino, D Fleischhack, H Fraija, N Galván-Gámez, A García-González, J González, M Goodman, J Hampel-Arias, Z Harding, J Hernandez, S Hona, B Hueyotl-Zahuantitla, F Iriarte, A Jardin-Blicq, A Joshi, V Lara, A Vargas, H Luis-Raya, G Malone, K Marinelli, S Martínez-Castro, J Martinez, O Matthews, J Miranda-Romagnoli, P Moreno, E Mostafá, M Nellen, L Newbold, M Nisa, M Noriega-Papaqui, R Pérez-Pérez, E Pretz, J Ren, Z Rho, C Rivière, C Rosa-González, D Rosenberg, M Salazar, H Greus, F Sandoval, A Schneider, M Schoorlemmer, H Sinnis, G Smith, A Surajbali, P Taboada, I Tollefson, K Torres, I Villaseño, L Weisgarber, T Wood, J Zepeda, A Zhou, H Collaboration, I Aartsen, M Ackermann, M Adams, J Aguilar, J Ahlers, M Ahrens, M Altmann, D Andeen, K Anderson, T Ansseau, I Anton, G Argüelles, C Auffenberg, J Axani, S Backes, P Bagherpour, H Bai, X Barbano, A Barron, J Barwick, S Baum, V Bay, R Beatty, J Becker, K Tjus, J Berley, D Bernardini, E Besson, D Binder, G Bindig, D Blaufuss, E Blot, S Bohm, C Börner, M Bos, F Böser, S Botner, O Bourbeau, E Bourbeau, J Bradascio, F Braun, J Bretz, H Bron, S Brostean-Kaiser, J Burgman, A Busse, R Carver, T Chen, C Cheung, E Chirkin, D Clark, K Classen, L Collin, G Conrad, J Coppin, P Correa, P Cowen, D Cross, R Dave, P Day, M André, J Clercq, C DeLaunay, J Dembinski, H Deoskar, K Ridder, S Desiati, P Vries, K Wasseige, G With, M DeYoung, T Dujmovic, H Dunkman, M Dvorak, E Eberhardt, B Ehrhardt, T Eichmann, B Eller, P Evenson, P Fahey, S Fazely, A Felde, J Filimonov, K Finley, C Franckowiak, A Friedman, E Fritz, A Gaisser, T Gallagher, J Ganster, E Garrappa, S Gerhardt, L Ghorbani, K Giang, W Glauch, T Glüsenkamp, T Goldschmidt, A Gonzalez, J Grant, D Griffith, Z Haack, C Hallgren, A Halve, L Halzen, F Hanson, K Hebecker, D Heereman, D Helbing, K Hellauer, R Hickford, S Hignight, J Hill, G Hoffman, K Hoffmann, R Hoinka, T Hokanson-Fasig, B Hoshina, K Huang, F Huber, M Hultqvist, K Hünnefeld, M Hussain, R In, S Iovine, N Ishihara, A Jacobi, E Japaridze, G Jeong, M Jero, K Jones, B Kalaczynski, P Kang, W Kappes, A Kappesser, D Karg, T Karle, A Katz, U Kauer, M Keivani, A Kelley, J Kheirandish, A Kim, J Kintscher, T Kiryluk, J Kittler, T Klein, S Koirala, R Kolanoski, H Köpke, L Kopper, C Kopper, S Koskinen, D Kowalski, M Krings, K Kroll, M Krückl, G Kunwar, S Kurahashi, N Kyriacou, A Labare, M Lanfranchi, J Larson, M Lauber, F Leonard, K Leuermann, M Liu, Q Lohfink, E Mariscal, C Lu, L Lünemann, J Luszczak, W Madsen, J Maggi, G Mahn, K Makino, Y Mancina, S Mariş, I Maruyama, R Mase, K Maunu, R Meagher, K Medici, M Medina, A Meier, M Menne, T Merino, G Meures, T Miarecki, S Micallef, J Momenté, G Montaruli, T Moore, R Moulai, M Nagai, R Nahnhauer, R Nakarmi, P Naumann, U Neer, G Niederhausen, H Nowicki, S Nygren, D Pollmann, A Olivas, A O'Murchadha, A O'Sullivan, E Palczewski, T Pandya, H Pankova, D Peiffer, P Heros, C Pieloth, D Pinat, E Pizzuto, A Plum, M Price, P Przybylski, G Raab, C Raissi, A Rameez, M Rauch, L Rawlins, K Rea, I Reimann, R Relethford, B Renzi, G Resconi, E Rhode, W Richman, M Robertson, S Rongen, M Rott, C Ruhe, T Ryckbosch, D Rysewyk, D Safa, I Herrera, S Sandrock, A Sandroos, J Santander, M Sarkar, S Satalecka, K Schaufel, M Schlunder, P Schmidt, T Schneider, A Schneider, J Schöneberg, S Schumacher, L Sclafani, S Seckel, D Seunarine, S Soedingrekso, J Soldin, D Song, M Spiczak, G Spiering, C Stachurska, J Stamatikos, M Stanev, T Stasik, A Stein, R Stettner, J Steuer, A Stezelberger, T Stokstad, R Stößl, A Strotjohann, N Stuttard, T Sullivan, G Sutherland, M Tenholt, F Ter-Antonyan, S Terliuk, A Tilav, S Tobin, M Tönnis, C Toscano, S Tosi, D Tselengidou, M Tung, C Turcati, A Turcotte, R Turley, C Ty, B Unger, E Elorrieta, M Usner, M Vandenbroucke, J Driessche, W Eijk, D Eijndhoven, N Vanheule, S Santen, J Vraeghe, M Walck, C Wallace, A Wallraff, M Wandkowsky, N Wandler, F Watson, T Weaver, C Weiss, M Weldert, J Wendt, C Werthebach, J Westerhoff, S Whelan, B Whitehorn, N Wiebe, K Wiebusch, C Wille, L Williams, D Wills, L Wolf, M Wood, T Woolsey, E Woschnagg, K Wrede, G Xu, D Xu, X Xu, Y Yanez, J Yodh, G Yoshida, S Yuan, T Astrophysical Journal volume 871 96-96 (24 Jan 2019) http://arxiv.org/abs/1812.05682v3
Wed, 27 Feb 2019
16:00
C1

Royden's Theorem for free products

Dionysis Syrigos
(Southampton University)
Abstract

Let $G$ be a group which splits as $G = F_n * G_1 *...*G_k$, where every $G_i$ is freely indecomposable and not isomorphic to the group of integers.  Guirardel and Levitt generalised the Culler- Vogtmann Outer space of a free group by introducing an Outer space for $G$ as above, on which $\text{Out}(G)$ acts by isometries. Francaviglia and Martino introduced the Lipschitz metric for the Culler- Vogtmann space and later for the general Outer space. In a joint paper with Francaviglia and Martino, we prove that the group of isometries of the Outer space corresponding to $G$ , with respect to the Lipschitz metric, is exactly $\text{Out}(G)$. In this talk, we will describe the construction of the general Outer space and the corresponding Lipschitz metric in order to present the result about the isometries.

Wed, 20 Feb 2019
16:00
C1

Pathological topology in boundaries of hyperbolic groups

Benjamin Barrett
(Bristol University)
Abstract

In geometric group theory we study groups by their actions on metric spaces. Although a given group might admit many actions on different metric spaces, on a large scale these spaces will all look similar, and so the large scale properties of a space on which a group acts are intrinsic to the group. One particularly natural example of a large scale property used in this way is the Gromov boundary of a hyperbolic metric space. This is a topological space that can be thought of as compactifying the metric space at infinity. 

In this talk I will describe some constructions of spaces occurring in this way with nasty, fractal-like properties. On the other hand, there are limits to how pathological these spaces can be: theorems of Bestvina and Mess, Bowditch and Swarup imply that boundaries of hyperbolic groups are locally path connected whenever they are connected. I will discuss these results and some generalisations. 

Wed, 13 Feb 2019
16:00
C1

Applications of stackings of graphs

Joseph MacColl
(UCL)
Abstract

A stacking is a lift of an immersion of graphs $A\to B$ to an embedding of $A$ into the product of $B$ with the real line; their existence relates to orderability properties of groups. I will describe how Louder and Wilton used them to prove Wise's "$w$-cycles" conjecture: given a primitive word $w$ in a free group $F$, and a subgroup $H < F$, the number of conjugates of $H$ which intersect $<w>$ nontrivially is at most rank($H$). I will also discuss applications of the result to questions of coherence, and possible extensions of it.

Wed, 06 Feb 2019
16:00
C1

Cross ratios on boundaries of negatively curved spaces

Elia Fioravanti
(Oxford University)
Abstract

I will give a self-contained introduction to the theory of cross ratios on boundaries of Gromov hyperbolic and CAT(-1) spaces, focussing on the connections to the following two questions. When are two spaces with the 'same' Gromov boundary isometric/quasi-isometric? Are closed Riemannian manifolds completely determined (up to isometry) by the lengths of their closed geodesics?

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