Tue, 07 Mar 2017
11:00
C5

Unlikely Intersections in families of elliptic curves

Laura Capuano
(Oxford)
Abstract


What makes an intersection likely or unlikely? A simple dimension count shows that two varieties of dimension r and s are non "likely" to intersect if r < codim s, unless there are some special geometrical relations among them. A series of conjectures due to Bombieri-Masser-Zannier, Zilber and Pink rely on this philosophy. I will speak about a joint work with F. Barroero (Basel) in this framework in the special case of a curve in a family of elliptic curves. The proof is based on Pila-Zannier method, combining diophantine ingredients with a refinement of a theorem of Pila and Wilkie about counting rational points in sets definable in o-minimal structures.
   Everyone welcome!
 

A resting frog can deform the lily pad on which it sits. The weight of the frog applies a localised load to the lily pad (which is supported by the buoyancy of the liquid below), thus deforming the pad. Whether or not the frog knows it, the physical scenario of a floating elastic sheet subject to an applied load is present in a diverse range of situations spanning a spectrum of length scales. At global scales the gravitational loading of the lithosphere by mountain ranges and volcanic sea mounts involve much the same physical ingredients.

The classic picture of how spheres deform (e.g. when poked) is that they adopt something called 'mirror buckling' - this is a special deformation (an isometry) that is geometrically very elegant. This deformation is also very cheap (in terms of the elastic energy) and so it has long been assumed that this is what a physical shell (e.g. a ping pong ball or beach ball) will do when poked. However, experience shows that actually many shells don’t adopt this state - instead, beach balls wrinkle and ping pong balls crumple.

Tue, 14 Mar 2017

14:45 - 15:45
L4

The topology of the Wilsonahedron: A small case study

Susama Agarwala
(USNA)
Abstract

In this talk, I discuss the positive geometry of the Wilson Loop Diagrams appearing in SYM N-4 theory. In particular, I define an algorithm for associating Wilson Loop diagrams to convex cells of the positive Grassmannians. Using combinatorics of these cells, I then consider the geometry of N^2MHV diagrams on 6 points.

Tue, 07 Mar 2017

13:00 - 14:00
N3.12

Sequences

TBA
Fri, 07 Apr 2017

12:00 - 13:00
L6

Nonlinear stability of relativistic vortex sheets in two spatial dimensions

Tao Wang
(University of Brescia)
Abstract

We study vortex sheets for the relativistic Euler equations in three-dimensional Minkowski spacetime. The problem is a nonlinear hyperbolic problem with a characteristic free boundary. The so-called Lopatinskii condition holds only in a weak sense, which yields losses of derivatives. A necessary condition for the weak stability is obtained by analyzing roots of the Lopatinskii determinant associated to the linearized problem. Under such stability condition,  we prove short-time existence and nonlinear stability of relativistic vortex sheets by the Nash-Moser iterative scheme.

Fri, 07 Apr 2017

11:00 - 12:00
L6

On the weakly nonlinear Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of current-vortex sheets

Paolo Secchi
(University of Brescia)
Abstract

We consider the free boundary problem for 2D current-vortex sheets in ideal incompressible magneto-hydrodynamics near the transition point between the linearized stability and instability. In order to study the dynamics of the discontinuity near the onset of the instability, Hunter and Thoo have introduced an asymptotic quadratically nonlinear integro-differential equation for the amplitude of small perturbations of the planar discontinuity. 
In this talk we present our results about the well-posedness of the problem in the sense of Hadamard, under a suitable stability condition, that is the 
local-in-time existence in Sobolev spaces and uniqueness of smooth solutions to the Cauchy problem, and the strong continuous dependence on the data in the same topology.
Joint works with: Alessandro Morando and Paola Trebeschi.
 

Cancer is a complex and resilient set of diseases and the search for a cure requires a multi-strategic approach. Oxford Mathematicians Lucy Hutchinson, Eamonn Gaffney, Philip Maini and Helen Byrne and Jonathan Wagg and Alex Phipps from Roche have addressed this challenge by focusing on the mathematical modelling of blood vessel growth in cancer tumours.

Thu, 09 Mar 2017

16:00 - 17:00
L2

(COW seminar) Gopakumar-Vafa invariants via vanishing cycles

Davesh Maulik
(MIT)
Abstract

Given a Calabi-Yau threefold X, one can count curves on X using various approaches, for example using stable maps or ideal sheaves; for any curve class on X, this produces an infinite sequence of invariants, indexed by extra discrete data (e.g. by the domain genus of a stable map).  Conjecturally, however, this sequence is determined by only a finite number of integer invariants, known as Gopakumar-Vafa invariants.  In this talk, I will propose a direct definition of these invariants via sheaves of vanishing cycles, building on earlier approaches of Kiem-Li and Hosono-Saito-Takahashi.  Conjecturally, these should agree with the invariants as defined by stable maps.  I will also explain how to prove the conjectural correspondence for irreducible curves on local surfaces.  This is joint work with Yukinobu Toda.

Thu, 09 Mar 2017

14:30 - 15:30
L4

(COW seminar) Strange duality on abelian surfaces

Barbara Bolognese
Abstract

With the purpose of examining some relevant geometric properties of the moduli space of sheaves over an algebraic surface, Le Potier conjectured some unexpected duality between the complete linear series of certain natural divisors, called Theta divisors, on the moduli space. Such conjecture is widely known as Strange Duality conjecture. After having motivated the problem by looking at certain instances of quantization in physics, we will work in the setting of surfaces. We will then sketch the proof in the case of abelian surfaces, giving an idea of the techniques that are used. In particular, we will show how the theory of discrete Heisenberg groups and fiber wise Fourier-Mukai transforms, which might be applied to other cases of interest, enter the picture. This is joint work with Alina Marian, Dragos Opera and Kota Yoshioka.

Subscribe to