Wed, 29 Oct 2014
14:00
L2

The Structure of Counterexamples to Vaught's Conjecture

Robin Knight
(Oxford)
Abstract

Counterexamples to Vaught's Conjecture regarding the number of countable
models of a theory in a logical language, may felicitously be studied by investigating a tree
of types of different arities and belonging to different languages. This
tree emerges from a category of topological spaces, and may be studied as such, without
reference to the original logic. The tree has an intuitive character of absoluteness
and of self-similarity. We present theorems expressing these ideas, some old and some new.

Tue, 02 Dec 2014

14:30 - 15:30
L3

Phase transitions in bootstrap percolation

Michal Przykucki
(University of Oxford)
Abstract
We prove that there exist natural generalizations of the classical bootstrap percolation model on $\mathbb{Z}^2$ that have non-trivial critical probabilities, and moreover we characterize all homogeneous, local, monotone models with this property. Joint work with Paul Balister, Béla Bollobás and Paul Smith.
Tue, 11 Nov 2014

14:30 - 15:30
L6

Matroid bases polytope decomposition

Jorge Ramirez-Alfonsin
(Université Montpellier 2)
Abstract
Let $P(M)$ be the matroid base polytope of a matroid $M$. A decomposition of $P(M)$ is a subdivision of the form $P(M)=\cup_{i=1}^t P(M_i)$ where each $P(M_i)$ is also a matroid base polytope for some matroid $M_i$, and for each $1\le i\neq j\le t$ the intersection $P(M_i)\cap P(M_j)$ is a face of both $P(M_i)$ and $P(M_j)$. In this talk, we shall discuss some results on hyperplane splits, that is, polytope decomposition when $t=2$. We present sufficient conditions for $M$ so $P(M)$ has a hyperplane split and a characterization when $P(M_i\oplus M_j)$ has a hyperplane split, where $M_i\oplus M_j$ denotes the direct sum of $M_i$ and $M_j$. We also show that $P(M)$ has not a hyperplane split if $M$ is binary. Finally, we present some recent results concerning the existence of decompositions with $t\ge 3$.
Tue, 21 Oct 2014

14:30 - 15:30
L6

Spanning Trees in Random Graphs

Richard Montgomery
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract
Given a tree $T$ with $n$ vertices, how large does $p$ need to be for it to be likely that a copy of $T$ appears in the binomial random graph $G(n,p)$? I will discuss this question, including recent work confirming a conjecture which gives a good answer to this question for trees with bounded maximum degree.
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