On Stretching, Bending, Shearing and Twisting of Actin Filaments II: Multi-Resolution Modelling
Gunaratne, R Floyd, C Ni, H Papoian, G Erban, R (02 Mar 2022)
Reply to Galilean invariance without superluminal particles
Dragan, A Ekert, A (08 Mar 2022)
Tue, 03 May 2022

14:30 - 15:00
L3

Maximum relative distance between real rank-two and rank-one tensors

Henrik Eisenmann
(Max Planck Institute in Leipzig)
Abstract

We investigate the maximum distance of a rank-two tensor to rank-one tensors. An equivalent problem is given by the minimal ratio of spectral and Frobenius norm of a tensor. For matrices the distance of a rank k matrix to a rank r matrices is determined by its singular values, but since there is a lack of a fitting analog of the singular value decomposition for tensors, this question is more difficult in the regime of tensors.
 

Tue, 17 May 2022

14:00 - 14:30
L1

Pitching soap films

Alberto Paganini
(University of Leicester)
Abstract

This talk is about the mathematics behind an artistic project focusing on the vibrations of soap films.

Dynamics of fluctuations in quantum simple exclusion processes
Bernard, D Essler, F Hruza, L Medenjak, M SciPost Physics volume 12 issue 1 042 (28 Jan 2022)
Thu, 26 May 2022

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Propagation and stability of stress-affected transformation fronts in solids

Mikhail Poluektov
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

There is a wide range of problems in continuum mechanics that involve transformation fronts, which are non-stationary interfaces between two different phases in a phase-transforming or a chemically-transforming material. From the mathematical point of view, the considered problems are represented by systems of non-linear PDEs with discontinuities across non-stationary interfaces, kinetics of which depend on the solution of the PDEs. Such problems have a significant industrial relevance – an example of a transformation front is the localised stress-affected chemical reaction in Li-ion batteries with Si-based anodes. Since the kinetics of the transformation fronts depends on the continuum fields, the transformation front propagation can be decelerated and even blocked by the mechanical stresses. This talk will focus on three topics: (1) the stability of the transformation fronts in the vicinity of the equilibrium position for the chemo-mechanical problem, (2) a fictitious-domain finite-element method (CutFEM) for solving non-linear PDEs with transformation fronts and (3) an applied problem of Si lithiation.

Tue, 15 Mar 2022
14:00
C6

Colouring locally sparse graphs with the first moment method

Eoin Hurley
(Heidelberg University)
Abstract

A classical theorem of Molloy and Johansson states that if a graph is triangle free and has maximum degree at most $\Delta$, then it has chromatic number at most $\frac{\Delta}{\log \Delta}$. This was extended to graphs with few edges in their neighbourhoods by Alon-Krivelevich and Sudakov, and to list chromatic number by Vu. I will give a full and self-contained proof of these results that relies only on induction and the first moment method.

Symmetry and simplicity spontaneously emerge from the algorithmic nature of evolution.
Johnston, I Dingle, K Greenbury, S Camargo, C Doye, J Ahnert, S Louis, A Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America volume 119 issue 11 e2113883119 (11 Mar 2022)
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