Entanglement growth and correlation spreading with variable-range interactions in spin and fermionic tunneling models
Buyskikh, A
Fagotti, M
Schachenmayer, J
Essler, F
Daley, A
Physical Review A
volume 93
issue 5
053620
(23 May 2016)
Scaling of up–down asymmetric turbulent momentum flux with poloidal shaping mode number in tokamaks
Ball, J
Parra, F
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion
volume 58
issue 5
055016
(01 May 2016)
VeriSiMPL 2: An open-source software for the verification of max-plus-linear systems
Adzkiya, D
Zhang, Y
Abate, A
Discrete Event Dynamic Systems
volume 26
issue 1
109-145
(15 Mar 2016)
Thu, 21 Jan 2016
12:00
12:00
L6
Obstacle problems of Signorini type, and for non-local operators
Nicola Garofalo
(Universita' degli studi di Padova)
Abstract
In this talk I will overview what is presently known about various types of obstacle problems. The focus will be on elliptic and parabolic problems of Signorini type, and on problems for non-local operators. I will discuss the role of monotonicity formulas in such problems, as well as (in the time-independent case) of some new epiperimetric inequalities.
The structure of the genotype–phenotype map strongly constrains the evolution of non-coding RNA
Dingle, K
Schaper, S
Louis, A
Interface Focus
volume 5
issue 6
20150053
(06 Dec 2015)
Fri, 17 Jun 2016
11:45 -
12:45
L5
InFoMM CDT Group Meeting - Introduction to Research (includes complementary lunch)
Zach Wilmott, Ben Sloman, Stuart Thomson
(Mathematical Institute Oxford)
Fri, 20 May 2016
11:45 -
12:45
L4
InFoMM CDT Group Meeting - Introduction to Research (includes complementary lunch)
Jane Lee, Ferran Brosa Planella and Nabil Fadai
(Mathematical Institute Oxford)
Fri, 26 Feb 2016
11:45 -
12:45
L4
InFoMM CDT Group Meeting - Introduction to Research (includes complementary lunch)
Roxana Feier, Jane Lee and Graham Benham
Tue, 02 Feb 2016
15:45 -
16:45
L4
Thu, 18 Feb 2016
14:00 -
15:00
L5
Ten things you should know about quadrature
Professor Nick Trefethen
(Oxford)
Abstract
Quadrature is the term for the numerical evaluation of integrals. It's a beautiful subject because it's so accessible, yet full of conceptual surprises and challenges. This talk will review ten of these, with plenty of history and numerical demonstrations. Some are old if not well known, some are new, and two are subjects of my current research.