16:30
Shock Reflection and other 2D Riemann Problems in Gas Dynamics
Abstract
The Riemann problem is an IVP having simple piecewise constant initial data that is invariant under scaling. In 1D, the problem was originally considered by Riemann during the 19th century in the context of gas dynamics, and the general theory was more or less completed by Lax and Glimm in the mid-20th century. In 2D and MD, the situation is much more complicated, and very few analytic results are available. We discuss a shock reflection problem for the Euler equations for potential flow, with initial data that generates four interacting shockwaves. After reformulating the problem as a free boundary problem for a nonlinear PDE of mixed hyperbolic-elliptic type, the problem is solved via a sophisticated iteration procedure. The talk is based on joint work with G-Q Chen (Oxford) et. al. arXiv:2305.15224, to appear in JEMS (2025).
16:30
Fluctuations around the mean-field limit for attractive Riesz interaction kernels in the moderate regime
Abstract
In this talk I will give a short introduction to moderately interacting particle systems and the general notion of fluctuations around the mean-field limit. We will see how a central limit theorem can be shown for moderately interacting particles on the whole space for certain types of interaction potentials. The interaction potential approximates singular attractive potentials of sub-Coulomb type and we can show that the fluctuations become asymptotically Gaussians. The methodology is inspired by the classical work of Oelschläger in the 1980s on fluctuations for the porous-medium equation. To allow for attractive potentials we use a new approach of quantitative mean-field convergence in probability in order to include aggregation effects.
16:30
Sampling with Minimal Energy
Abstract
Minimal discrete energy problems arise in a variety of scientific contexts – such as crystallography, nanotechnology, information theory, and viral morphology, to name but a few. Our goal is to analyze the structure of configurations generated by optimal (and near optimal)-point configurations that minimize the Riesz s-energy over a sphere in Euclidean space R^d and, more generally, over a bounded manifold. The Riesz s-energy potential, which is a generalization of the Coulomb potential, is simply given by 1/r^s, where r denotes the distance between pairs of points. We show how such potentials for s>d and their minimizing point configurations are ideal for use in sampling surfaces.
Connections to the results by Field's medalist M. Viazovska and her collaborators on best-packing and universal optimality in 8 and 24 dimensions will be discussed. Finally we analyze the minimization of a "k-nearest neighbor" truncated version of Riesz energy that reduces the order N^2 computation for energy minimization to order N log N , while preserving global and local properties.
14:00
A Subspace-conjugate Gradient Method for Linear Matrix Equations
Abstract
13:30
Extended TQFT, gauge theory, and Measurement Based Quantum Computation
Abstract
Measurement-Based Quantum Computation (MBQC) is a model of quantum computation driven by measurements instead of unitary gates. In 2D it is capable of supporting universal quantum computations. Interestingly, while all measurements are local, the computational output involves non local observables. We will use the simpler case of 1D MBQC to illustrate how these features can be captured by ideas from gauge theory and extended TQFT. We will also explain MBQC from the perspective of the extended Hilbert space construction in gauge theories, in which the entanglement edge modes play the role of the logical qubit.