14:00
Antitriangular factorization of saddle point matrices and the Null Space method
Abstract
Joint work with Jen Pestana.
Joint work with Jen Pestana.
In this talk we will discuss some properties of Schrödinger operators on parabolic manifolds, and particularize them to study the stability operator of a parabolic surface with constant mean curvature immersed in a 3-manifold that admits a Killing vector field. As an application, we will determine the range of values of H such that some homogeneous 3-manifolds admit complete parabolic stable surfaces with constant mean curvature H. Time permitting, we will also discuss some related area and first-eigenvalue estimates for the stability operator of constant mean curvature graphs in such 3-manifolds.
I'll show how a simple universal property attaches a category of derived manifolds to any category with finite products and some suitable notion of "topology". Starting with the category of real Euclidean spaces and infinitely differentiable maps yields the category of derived smooth manifolds studied by D. Spivak and others, while starting with affine spaces over some ring and polynomial maps produces a flavour of the derived algebraic geometry of Lurie and Toen-Vezzosi.
I'll motivate this from the differentiable setting by showing that the universal property easily implies all of D. Spivak's axioms for being "good for intersection theory on manifolds".
We give an overview of joint work with Lewis Topley on modular W-algebras. In particular, we outline the classification 1-dimensional modules for modular W-algebras for gl_n, which in turn this leads to a classification of minimal dimensional modules for reduced enveloping algebras for gl_n.
Oxford Mathematician Maria Bruna has won the Women of the Future Science award. The Women of the Future Awards, founded by Pinky Lilani in 2006, were conceived to provide a platform for the pipeline of female talent in the UK. Now in their 11th year they recognise the inspirational young female stars of today and tomorrow.
Stochastic Hamiltonian systems with multiplicative noise are a mathematical model for many physical systems with uncertainty. For example, they can be used to describe synchrotron oscillations of a particle in a storage ring. Just like their deterministic counterparts, stochastic Hamiltonian systems possess several important geometric features; for instance, their phase flows preserve the canonical symplectic form. When simulating these systems numerically, it is therefore advisable that the numerical scheme also preserves such geometric structures. In this talk we propose a variational principle for stochastic Hamiltonian systems and use it to construct stochastic Galerkin variational integrators. We show that such integrators are indeed symplectic, preserve integrals of motion related to Lie group symmetries, demonstrate superior long-time energy behavior compared to nonsymplectic methods, and they include stochastic symplectic Runge-Kutta methods as a special case. We also analyze their convergence properties and present the results of several numerical experiments.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but what about symmetry? In our final feature on mathematicians let loose in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford Mathematician Balázs Szendrői investigates the beauty of symmetry in the Museum's Islamic art works. As he explains, no matter what the tile pattern may look like, its underlying symmetry configuration belongs to a small set of possibilities.
In this meeting we will talk about the first two chapters of Robert Ghrist's book "Elementary Applied Topology". The book is freely available at the following link: https://www.math.upenn.edu/~ghrist/notes.html