Interface motion in ill-posed diffusion equations
Abstract
ill-posed PDE, thus any limit dynamics might feature measure-valued solutions, phases interfaces, and hysteretic interface motion.
interfaces with non-trivial dynamics and study the rigorous passage to the limit for a piecewise affine nonlinearity.
Towards an effective theory for nematic elastomers in a membrane limit
Abstract
For nematic elastomers in a membrane limit, one expects in the elastic theory an interplay of material and structural non-linearities. For instance, nematic elastomer material has an associated anisotropy which allows for the formation of microstructure via nematic reorientation under deformation. Furthermore, polymeric membrane type structures (of which nematic elastomer membranes are a type) often wrinkle under applied deformations or tractions to avoid compressive stresses. An interesting question which motivates this study is whether the formation of microstructure can suppress wrinkling in nematic elastomer membranes for certain classes of deformation. This idea has captured the interest of NASA as they seek lightweight and easily deployable space structures, and since the use of lightweight deployable membranes is often limited by wrinkling.
In order to understand the interplay of these non-linearities, we derive an elastic theory for nematic elastomers of small thickness. Our starting point is three-dimensional elasticity, and for this we incorporate the widely used model Bladon, Terentjev and Warner for the energy density of a nematic elastomer along with a Frank elastic penalty on nematic reorientation. We derive membrane and bending limits taking the thickness to zero by exploiting the mathematical framework of Gamma-convergence. This follows closely the seminal works of LeDret and Raoult on the membrane theory and Friesecke, James and Mueller on the bending theory.
J.C. Maxwell's 1879 Paper on Thermal Transpiration and Its Relevance to Contemporary PDE
Abstract
Martensitic Disclinations, Modeling Analysis and Experiments
On Roth's theorem on arithmetic progression
Abstract
In 1953 Roth proved that any positive density subset of the integers contains a non-trivial three term arithmetic progression. I will present a recent quantitative improvement for this theorem, give an overview of the main ideas of the proof, and discuss its relation to other recent work in the area. I will also discuss some closely related problems.
Sieving very thin sets of primes
Abstract
We discuss a new method to bound the number of primes in certain very thin sets. The sets S under consideration have the property that if p∈S and q is prime with q|(p−1), then q∈S. For each prime p, only 1 or 2 residue classes modulo p are omitted, and thus the traditional small sieve furnishes only the bound O(x/log2x) (at best) for the counting function of S. Using a different strategy, one related to the theory of prime chains and Pratt trees, we prove that either S
contains all primes or #{p∈S:p≤x}=O(x1−c) for some positive c. Such sets arise, for example, in work on Carmichael's conjecture for Euler's function.
THE STRUCTURE OF J_0(N)[m] AT AN EISENSTEIN PRIME m
Abstract
In this talk, we will discuss the dimension of J0(N)[m] at an Eisenstein prime m for
square-free level N. We will also study the structure of J0(N)[m] as a Galois module.
This work generalizes Mazur’s work on Eisenstein ideals of prime level to the case of
arbitrary square-free level up to small exceptional cases.