Wed, 11 Oct 2023
16:00
L6

Reasons to be accessible

Joseph MacManus
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

If some structure, mathematical or otherwise, is giving you grief, then often the first thing to do is to attempt to break the offending object down into (finitely many) simpler pieces.

In group theory, when we speak of questions of *accessibility* we are referring to the ability to achieve precisely this. The idea of an 'accessible group' was first coined by Terry Wall in the 70s, and since then has left quite a mark on our field (and others). In this talk I will introduce the toolbox required to study accessibility, and walk you and your groups through some reasons to be accessible.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023
11:00
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

DPhil Presentations

DPhil Students
Abstract

As part of the internal seminar schedule for Stochastic Analysis for this coming term, DPhil students have been invited to present on their works to date. Student talks are 20 minutes, which includes question and answer time.

Tue, 14 Nov 2023

15:30 - 16:30
Online

Preferential attachment trees built from random walks

Gábor Pete
(Rényi Institute/Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

I will talk about two separate projects where random walks are building a random tree, yielding preferential attachment behaviour from completely local mechanisms.
First, the Tree Builder Random Walk is a randomly growing tree, built by a walker as she is walking around the tree. At each time $n$, she adds a leaf to her current vertex with probability $n^{-\gamma}, \gamma\in(2/3, 1]$, then moves to a uniform random neighbor on the possibly modified tree. We show that the tree process at its growth times, after a random finite number of steps, can be coupled to be identical to the Barabási-Albert preferential attachment tree model. This coupling implies that many properties known for the BA-model, such as diameter and degree distribution, can be directly transferred to our model. Joint work with János Engländer, Giulio Iacobelli, and Rodrigo Ribeiro. Second, we introduce a network-of-networks model for physical networks: we randomly grow subgraphs of an ambient graph (say, a box of $\mathbb{Z}^d$) until they hit each other, building a tree from how these spatially extended nodes touch each other. We compute non-rigorously the degree distribution exponent of this tree in large generality, and provide a rigorous analysis when the nodes are loop-erased random walks in dimension $d=2$ or $d\geq 5$, using a connection with the Uniform Spanning Tree. Joint work with Ádám Timár, Sigurdur Örn Stefánsson, Ivan Bonamassa, and Márton Pósfai. (See https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.01583)

Tue, 21 Nov 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Embedding planar graphs on point-sets: Problems and new results

Raphael Steiner
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

In this talk, I will present new results addressing two rather well-known problems on the embeddability of planar graphs on point-sets in the plane. The first problem, often attributed to Mohar, asks for the asymptotics of the minimum size of so-called universal point sets, i.e. point sets that simultaneously allow straight-line embeddings of all planar graphs on $n$ vertices. In the first half of the talk I will present a family of point sets of size $O(n)$ that allow straight-line embeddings of a large family of $n$-vertex planar graphs, including all bipartite planar graphs. In the second half of the talk, I will present a family of $(3+o(1))\log_2(n)$ planar graphs on $n$ vertices that cannot be simultaneously embedded straight-line on a common set of $n$ points in the plane. This significantly strengthens the previously best known exponential bound.

Tue, 24 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Monochromatic products and sums in N and Q

Matt Bowen
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

We show that every 2-coloring of the natural numbers and any finite coloring of the rationals contains monochromatic sets of the form $\{x, y, xy, x+y\}$. We also discuss generalizations and obstructions to extending this result to arbitrary finite coloring of the naturals. This is partially based on joint work with Marcin Sabok.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

15:30 - 16:30
Online

Critical core percolation on random graphs

Alice Contat
(Université Paris-Saclay)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

Motivated by the desire to construct large independent sets in random graphs, Karp and Sipser modified the usual greedy construction to yield an algorithm that outputs an independent set with a large cardinal called the Karp-Sipser core. When run on the Erdős-Rényi $G(n,c/n)$ random graph, this algorithm is optimal as long as $c < e$. We will present the proof of a physics conjecture of Bauer and Golinelli (2002) stating that at criticality, the size of the Karp-Sipser core is of order $n^{3/5}$. Along the way we shall highlight the similarities and differences with the usual greedy algorithm and the $k$-core algorithm.
Based on a joint work with Nicolas Curien and Thomas Budzinski.

Tue, 17 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Online

$k$-blocks and forbidden induced subgraphs

Maria Chudnovsky
(Princeton)
Further Information

Part of the Oxford Discrete Maths and Probability Seminar, held via Zoom. Please see the seminar website for details.

Abstract

A $k$-block in a graph is a set of $k$ vertices every two of which are joined by $k$ vertex disjoint paths. By a result of Weissauer, graphs with no $k$-blocks admit tree-decompositions with especially useful structure. While several constructions show that it is probably very difficult to characterize induced subgraph obstructions for bounded tree width, a lot can be said about graphs with no $k$-blocks. On the other hand, forbidding induced subgraphs places significant restrictions on the structure of a $k$-block in a graphs. We will discuss this phenomenon and its consequences in the study of tree-decompositions in classes of graphs defined by forbidden induced subgraphs.

Thu, 25 Apr 2024

14:00 - 15:00
Lecture Room 3

ESPIRA: Estimation of Signal Parameters via Iterative Rational Approximation

Nadiia Derevianko
(University of Göttingen)
Abstract

We introduce a new method - ESPIRA (Estimation of Signal Parameters via Iterative Rational Approximation) \cite{DP22,  DPP21} - for the recovery of complex exponential  sums
$$
f(t)=\sum_{j=1}^{M} \gamma_j \mathrm{e}^{\lambda_j t},
$$
that are determined by a finite number of parameters: the order $M$, weights $\gamma_j \in \mathbb{C} \setminus \{0\}$ and nodes  $\mathrm{e}^{\lambda_j} \in \mathbb{C}$ for $j=1,...,M$.  Our new recovery procedure is based on the observation that Fourier coefficients (or DFT coefficients) of exponential sums have a special rational structure.  To  reconstruct this structure in a stable way we use the AAA algorithm  proposed by Nakatsukasa et al.   We show that ESPIRA can be interpreted as a matrix pencil method applied to Loewner matrices. 

During the talk we will demonstrate that ESPIRA outperforms Prony-like methods such as ESPRIT and MPM for noisy data and for signal approximation by short exponential sums.  

 

Bibliography
N. Derevianko,  G.  Plonka, 
Exact reconstruction of extended exponential sums using rational approximation of their Fourier coefficients, Anal.  Appl.,  20(3),  2022,  543-577.


N. Derevianko,  G. Plonka,  M. Petz, 
From ESPRIT to ESPIRA: Estimation of signal parameters by iterative rational approximation,   IMA J. Numer. Anal.,  43(2),  2023, 789--827.  


Y. Nakatsukasa, O. Sète,   L.N. Trefethen,  The AAA algorithm for rational approximation.
SIAM J. Sci. Comput., 40(3),   2018,  A1494–A1522.  

An explicit Milstein-type scheme for interacting particle systems and McKean--Vlasov SDEs with common noise and non-differentiable drift coefficients
Biswas, S Kumar, C Neelima Dos Reis, G Reisinger, C Annals of Applied Probability volume 34 issue 2 2326-2363 (03 Apr 2024)
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