Tue, 31 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Local topological order and boundary algebras

Pieter Naaijkens
(University of Cardiff)
Abstract

The study of topologically ordered quantum phases has led to interesting connections with, for example, the study of subfactors. In this talk, I will introduce a new axiomatisation of such quantum models defined on d-dimensional square lattices in terms of nets of projections. These local topological order axioms are satisfied by known 2D models such as the toric code and Levin-Wen models built on a unitary fusion category. We show that these axioms lead to a definition of boundary algebras naturally living on a hyperplane. This boundary algebra encodes information about the excitations in the bulk theory, leading to a bulk-boundary correspondence. I will outline the main points, with an emphasis on interesting connections to operator algebras and fusion categories. Based on joint work with C. Jones, Penneys, and Wallick (arXiv:2307.12552).

Thu, 26 Oct 2023

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Cartan subalgebras of classifiable C*-algebras

Wilhelm Winter
Abstract

I will survey Cartan respectively diagonal subalgebras of nuclear C*-algebras. This setup corresponds to a presentation of the ambient C*-algebra as an amenable groupoid C*-algebra, which in turn means that there is an underlying structure akin to an amenable topological dynamical system.

The existence of such subalgebras is tightly connected to the UCT problem; the classification of Cartan pairs is largely uncharted territory. I will present new constructions of diagonals of the Jiang-Su algebra Z and of the Cuntz algebra O_2, and will then focus on distinguishing Cantor Cartan subalgebras of O_2.

Defective colouring of hypergraphs
Girao, A Illingworth, F Scott, A Wood, D Random Structures and Algorithms volume 64 issue 3 663-675 (27 Oct 2023)
Tue, 05 Dec 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L6

Representation type of cyclotomic quiver Hecke algebras

Qi Wang
(Tsinghua University)
Abstract

One of the fundamental problems in representation theory is determining the representation type of algebras. In this talk, we will introduce the representation type of cyclotomic quiver Hecke algebras, also known as cyclotomic Khovanov-Lauda-Rouquier algebras, especially in affine type A and affine type C. Our main result relies on novel constructions of the maximal dominant weights of integrable highest weight modules over quantum groups. This talk is based on collaborations with Susumu Ariki, Berta Hudak, and Linliang Song.

Tue, 10 Oct 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

(CANCELLED) Percolation through isoperimetry

Michael Krivelevich
(Tel Aviv University)
Abstract

Let $G$ be a $d$-regular graph of growing degree on $n$ vertices, and form a random subgraph $G_p$ of $G$ by retaining edge of $G$ independently with probability $p=p(d)$. Which conditions on $G$ suffice to observe a phase transition at $p=1/d$, similar to that in the binomial random graph $G(n,p)$, or, say, in a random subgraph of the binary hypercube $Q^d$?

We argue that in the supercritical regime $p=(1+\epsilon)/d$, $\epsilon>0$ being a small constant, postulating that every vertex subset $S$ of $G$ of at most $n/2$ vertices has its edge boundary at least $C|S|$, for some large enough constant $C=C(\epsilon)>0$, suffices to guarantee the likely appearance of the giant component in $G_p$. Moreover, its asymptotic order is equal to that in the random graph $G(n,(1+\epsilon)/n)$, and all other components are typically much smaller.

We further give examples demonstrating the tightness of this result in several key senses.

A joint work with Sahar Diskin, Joshua Erde and Mihyun Kang.

Thu, 30 Nov 2023

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Gravitational Landau Damping

Matthew Schrecker
(University of Bath)
Abstract

In the 1960s, Lynden-Bell, studying the dynamics of galaxies around steady states of the gravitational Vlasov-Poisson equation, described a phenomenon he called "violent relaxation," a convergence to equilibrium through phase mixing analogous in some respects to Landau damping in plasma physics. In this talk, I will discuss recent work on this gravitational Landau damping for the linearised Vlasov-Poisson equation and, in particular, the critical role of regularity of the steady states in distinguishing damping from oscillatory behaviour in the perturbations. This is based on joint work with Mahir Hadzic, Gerhard Rein, and Christopher Straub.

Thu, 23 Nov 2023

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Recent developments in fully nonlinear degenerate free boundary problems

Edgard Pimentel
(University of Coimbra)
Abstract

We consider degenerate fully nonlinear equations, whose degeneracy rate depends on the gradient of solutions. We work under a Dini-continuity condition on the degeneracy term and prove that solutions are continuously differentiable. Then we frame this class of equations in the context of a free transmission problem. Here, we discuss the existence of solutions and establish a result on interior regularity. We conclude the talk by discussing a boundary regularity estimate; of particular interest is the case of point-wise regularity at the intersection of the fixed and the free boundaries. This is based on joint work with David Stolnicki.

Thu, 19 Oct 2023

12:00 - 13:00
L3

Extrinsic flows on convex hypersurfaces of graph type.

Hyunsuk Kang
(Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology and University of Oxford)
Abstract

Extrinsic flows are evolution equations whose speeds are determined by the extrinsic curvature of submanifolds in ambient spaces.  Some of the well-known ones are mean curvature flow, Gauss curvature flow, and Lagrangian mean curvature flow.

We focus on the special case in which the speed of a flow is given by powers of mean curvature for smooth convex hypersurfaces of graph type, i.e., ones that can be represented as the graph of a function.  Convergence and long-time existence of such flow will be discussed. Furthermore, C^2 estimates which are independent of height of the graph will be derived to see that the boundary of the domain of the graph is also a smooth solution for the same flow as a submanifold with codimension two in the classical sense.  Some of the main ideas, notably a priori estimates via the maximum principle, come from the work of Huisken and Ecker on mean curvature evolution of entire graphs in 1989.  This is a joint work with Ki-ahm Lee and Taehun Lee.

Thu, 16 Nov 2023
16:00
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

Automated Market Makers Designs beyond Constant Functions

Dr Leandro Sanchez-Betancourt
(Mathematical Insitute, Oxford)
Abstract

Popular automated market makers (AMMs) use constant function markets (CFMs) to clear the demand and supply in the pool of liquidity. A key drawback in the implementation of CFMs is that liquidity providers (LPs) are currently providing liquidity at a loss, on average. In this paper, we propose two new designs for decentralised trading venues, the arithmetic liquidity pool (ALP) and the geometric liquidity pool (GLP). In both pools, LPs choose impact functions that determine how liquidity taking orders impact the marginal exchange rate of the pool, and set the price of liquidity in the form of quotes around the marginal rate. The impact functions and the quotes determine the dynamics of the marginal rate and the price of liquidity. We show that CFMs are a subset of ALP; specifically, given a trading function of a CFM, there are impact functions and  quotes in the ALP that replicate the marginal rate dynamics and the execution costs in the CFM. For the ALP and GLP, we propose an optimal liquidity provision strategy where the price of liquidity maximises the LP's expected profit and the strategy depends on the LP's (i) tolerance to inventory risk and (ii) views on the demand for liquidity. Our strategies admit closed-form solutions and are computationally efficient.  We show that the price of liquidity in CFMs is suboptimal in the ALP. Also, we give conditions on the impact functions and the liquidity provision strategy to prevent arbitrages from rountrip trades. Finally, we use transaction data from Binance and Uniswap v3 to show that liquidity provision is not a loss-leading activity in the ALP.

Fri, 01 Dec 2023

15:00 - 16:00
L5

Computing algebraic distances and associated invariants for persistence

Martina Scolamiero
(KTH Stockholm)
Further Information

Martina Scolamiero is an Assistant Professor in Mathametics with specialization in Geometry and Mathematical Statistics in Artificial Intelligence.

Her research is in Applied and Computational Topology, mainly working on defining topological invariants which are suitable for data analysis, understanding their statistical properties and their applicability in Machine Learning. Martina is also interested in applications of topological methods to Neuroscience and Psychiatry.

Abstract

Pseudo metrics between persistence modules can be defined starting from Noise Systems [1].  Such metrics are used to compare the modules directly or to extract stable vectorisations. While the stability property directly follows from the axioms of Noise Systems, finding algorithms or closed formulas to compute the distances or associated vectorizations  is often a difficult problem, especially in the multi-parameter setting. In this seminar I will show how extra properties of Noise Systems can be used to define algorithms. In particular I will describe how to compute stable vectorisations with respect to Wasserstein distances [2]. Lastly I will discuss ongoing work (with D. Lundin and R. Corbet) for the computation of a geometric distance (the Volume Noise distance) and associated invariants on interval modules.

[1] M. Scolamiero, W. Chachólski, A. Lundman, R. Ramanujam, S. Oberg. Multidimensional Persistence and Noise, (2016) Foundations of Computational Mathematics, Vol 17, Issue 6, pages 1367-1406. doi:10.1007/s10208-016-9323-y.

[2] J. Agerberg, A. Guidolin, I. Ren and M. Scolamiero. Algebraic Wasserstein distances and stable homological invariants of data. (2023) arXiv: 2301.06484.

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