Mon, 07 Nov 2016

14:15 - 15:15
L1

Probabilistic Numerical Computation: A New Concept?

MARK GIROLAMI
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

Ambitious mathematical models of highly complex natural phenomena are challenging to analyse, and more and more computationally expensive to evaluate. This is a particularly acute problem for many tasks of interest and numerical methods will tend to be slow, due to the complexity of the models, and potentially lead to sub-optimal solutions with high levels of uncertainty which needs to be accounted for and subsequently propagated in the statistical reasoning process. This talk will introduce our contributions to an emerging area of research defining a nexus of applied mathematics, statistical science and computer science, called "probabilistic numerics". The aim is to consider numerical problems from a statistical viewpoint, and as such provide numerical methods for which numerical error can be quantified and controlled in a probabilistic manner. This philosophy will be illustrated on problems ranging from predictive policing via crime modelling to computer vision, where probabilistic numerical methods provide a rich and essential quantification of the uncertainty associated with such models and their computation. 

Wed, 01 Mar 2017
15:00
L3

Short addition sequences for theta functions

Andreas Enge
(University of Bordeaux)
Abstract

Classical modular functions and forms may be evaluated numerically using truncations of the q-series of the Dedekind eta-function or of Jacobi theta-constants. We show that the special structure of the exponents occurring in these series makes it possible to evaluate their truncations to N terms with N+o(N) multiplications; the proofs use elementary number theory and sometimes rely on a Bateman-Horn type conjecture. We furthermore obtain a baby-step giant-step algorithm needing only a sublinear number of multiplications, more precisely O (N/log^r N) for any r>0. Both approaches lead to a measurable speed-up in practical precision ranges, and push the cross-over point for the asymptotically faster arithmetic- geometric mean algorithm even further.

(joint work with William Hart and Fredrik Johansson) ​

All-sky search for time-integrated neutrino emission from astrophysical sources with 7 yr of IceCube data
Abraham, K Ackermann, M Sarkar, S Astrophysical Journal volume 835 issue 2 151 (01 Jan 2017)
Mon, 28 Nov 2016
14:15
L4

 Moduli spaces of generalized holomorphic bundles

Ruxandra Moraru
(Waterloo)
Abstract

Generalized holomorphic bundles are the analogues of holomorphic vector bundles in the generalized geometry setting. In this talk, I will discuss the deformation theory of generalized holomorphic bundles on generalized Kaehler manifolds. I will also give explicit examples of moduli spaces of generalized holomorphic bundles on Hopf surfaces and on Inoue surfaces. This is joint work with Shengda Hu and Mohamed El Alami

Mon, 21 Nov 2016
14:15
L4

Minimal Log Discrepancy of Isolated Singularities and Reeb Orbits

Mark McLean
(Stony Brook)
Abstract

Let A be an affine variety inside a complex N dimensional vector space which either has an isolated singularity at the origin or is smooth at the origin. The intersection of A with a very small  sphere turns out to be a contact manifold called the link of A. Any contact manifold contactomorphic to the link of A is said to be Milnor fillable by A. If the first Chern class of our link is 0 then we can assign an invariant of our singularity called the minimal
discrepancy. We relate the minimal discrepancy with indices of certain Reeb orbits on our link. As a result we show that the standard contact
5 dimensional sphere has a unique Milnor filling up to normalization. This generalizes a Theorem by Mumford.

Mon, 14 Nov 2016
14:15
L4

Integrals and symplectic forms on infinitesimal quotients

Brent Pym
(Oxford)
Abstract

Title: Integrals and symplectic forms on infinitesimal quotients

Abstract: Lie algebroids are models for "infinitesimal actions" on manifolds: examples include Lie algebra actions, singular foliations, and Poisson brackets.  Typically, the orbit space of such an action is highly singular and non-Hausdorff (a stack), but good algebraic techniques have been developed for studying its geometry.  In particular, the orbit space has a formal tangent complex, so that it makes sense to talk about differential forms.  I will explain how this perspective sheds light on the differential geometry of shifted symplectic structures, and unifies a number of classical cohomological localization theorems.  The talk is
based mostly on joint work with Pavel Safronov.

 

Mon, 17 Oct 2016
14:15
L4

Invariant G_2-instantons

Jason Lotay
(UCL)
Abstract

Since Donaldson-Thomas proposed a programme for studying gauge theory in higher dimensions, there has
been significant interest in understanding special Yang-Mills connections in Ricci-flat 7-manifolds with holonomy
G_2 called G_2-instantons.  However, still relatively little is known about these connections, so we begin the
systematic study of G_2-instantons in the SU(2)^2-invariant setting.  We provide existence, non-existence and
classification results, and exhibit explicit sequences of G_2-instantons where “bubbling" and "removable
singularity" phenomena occur in the limit.  This is joint work with Goncalo Oliveira (Duke).

 

Mon, 07 Nov 2016
14:15
L4

On short-time existence for mean curvature flow of surface clusters with triple edges

Felix Schulze
(UCL)
Abstract

We will discuss two recent short-time existence results for (1) mean curvature of surface clusters, where n-dimensional surfaces in R^{n+k}, are allowed to meet at equal angles along smooth edges, and (2) for planar networks, where curves are initially allowed to meet in multiple junctions that resolve immediately into triple junctions with equal angles. The first result, which is joint work with B. White, follows from an elliptic regularisation scheme, together with a local regularity result for flows with triple junctions, which are close to a static flow of the half-planes. The second result, which is joint work with T. Ilmanen and A.Neves, relies on a monotonicity formula for expanding solutions and a local regularity result for the network flow. 
 

Tue, 08 Nov 2016
14:15
L4

Decomposition rules for representations of p-adic groups

Max Gurevich
(Weizmann Institute)
Abstract


What are the irreducible constituents of a smooth representation of a p-adic group that is constructed through parabolic induction? In the case of GL_n this is the study of the multiplicative behaviour of irreducible representations in the Bernstein-Zelevinski ring. Strikingly, the same decomposition problem can be reformulated through various Lie-theoretic settings of type A, such as canonical bases in quantum groups, representations of affine Hecke algebras, quantum affine Lie algebras, or more recently, KLR algebras. While partially touching on some of these phenomena, I will present new results on the problem using mostly classical tools. In particular, we will see how introducing a width invariant to an irreducible representation can circumvent the complexity involved in computations of Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials.

Mon, 10 Oct 2016

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Small-time fluctuations for sub-Riemannian diffusion loops

KAREN HABERMANN
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

We study the small-time fluctuations for diffusion processes which are conditioned by their initial and final positions and whose diffusivity has a sub-Riemannian structure. In the case where the endpoints agree, we discuss the convergence of the suitably rescaled fluctuations to a limiting diffusion loop, which is equal in law to the loop we obtain by taking the limiting process of the unconditioned rescaled diffusion processes and condition it to return to its starting point. The generator of the unconditioned limiting rescaled diffusion process can be described in terms of the original generator.

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