Introduction on Nonlinear Wave Equations (Lecture 2 of 4)
Abstract
The course covers the standard material on nonlinear wave equations, including local existence, breakdown criterion, global existence for small data for semi-linear equations, and Strichartz estimate if time allows.
Introduction on Nonlinear Wave Equations (Lecture 1 of 4)
Abstract
The course covers the standard material on nonlinear wave equations, including local existence, breakdown criterion, global existence for small data for semi-linear equations, and Strichartz estimate if time allows.
Detecting and repairing arbitrage in traded option prices
Abstract
Abstract: Option price data are used as inputs for model calibration, risk-neutral density estimation and many other financial applications. The presence of arbitrage in option price data can lead to poor performance or even failure of these tasks, making pre-processing of the data to eliminate arbitrage necessary. Most attention in the relevant literature has been devoted to arbitrage-free smoothing and filtering (i.e. removing) of data. In contrast to smoothing, which typically changes nearly all data, or filtering, which truncates data, we propose to repair data by only necessary and minimal changes. We formulate the data repair as a linear programming (LP) problem, where the no-arbitrage relations are constraints, and the objective is to minimise prices' changes within their bid and ask price bounds. Through empirical studies, we show that the proposed arbitrage repair method gives sparse perturbations on data, and is fast when applied to real world large-scale problems due to the LP formulation. In addition, we show that removing arbitrage from prices data by our repair method can improve model calibration with enhanced robustness and reduced calibration error.
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Multiplicative gerbes and H^4(BG)
Abstract
The cohomology of a manifold classifies geometric structures over it. One instance of this principle is the classification of line bundles via Chern classes. The classifying space BG associated to a (Lie) group G is a simplicial manifold which encodes the group structure. Its cohomology hence classifies geometric objects over G which play well with its multiplication. These are known as characteristic classes, and yield invariants of G-principal bundles.
I will introduce multiplicative gerbes and show how they realise classes in H^4(BG) when G is compact. Along the way, we will meet different versions of Lie group cohomology, smooth 2-groups and a few spectral sequences.
Link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZGRiMTM1ZjQtZWNi…
Donaldson-Thomas theory, quantum loop algebras, and wall-crossing
Abstract
The purpose of this talk is to provide a quick introduction to the buzzwords in the title. Then I'll discuss some (mostly unexplored) conjectures and thoughts.
10:00
Topological approaches to Nielsen equivalence
Abstract
In the world of finitely generated groups, presentations are a blessing and a curse. They are versatile and compact, but in general tell you very little about the group. Tietze transformations offer much (but deliver little) in terms of understanding the possible presentations of a group. I will introduce a different way of transforming presentations of a group called a Nielsen transformation, and show how topological methods can be used to study Nielsen transformations.