Mon, 21 Oct 2019
15:45
L6

Lower bounds on the tunnel number of composite spatial theta graphs

Scott Taylor
(Colby College)
Abstract

The tunnel number of a graph embedded in a 3-dimensional manifold is the fewest number of arcs needed so that the union of the graph with the arcs has handlebody exterior. The behavior of tunnel number with respect to connected sum of knots can vary dramatically, depending on the knots involved. However, a classical theorem of Scharlemann and Schultens says that the tunnel number of a composite knot is at least the number of factors. For theta graphs, trivalent vertex sum is the operation which most closely resembles the connected sum of knots. The analogous theorem of Scharlemann and Schultens no longer holds, however. I will provide a sharp lower bound for the tunnel number of composite theta graphs, using recent work on a new knot invariant which is additive under connected sum and trivalent vertex sum. This is joint work with Maggy Tomova.

Thu, 21 Nov 2019

12:00 - 13:00
L4

Analysis of systems with small cross-diffusion

Luca Alasio
(Gran Sasso Science Institute GSSI)
Abstract

I will present recent results concerning a class of nonlinear parabolic systems of partial differential equations with small cross-diffusion (see doi.org/10.1051/m2an/2018036 and arXiv:1906.08060). Such systems can be interpreted as a perturbation of a linear problem and they have been proposed to describe the dynamics of a variety of large systems of interacting particles. I will discuss well-posedness, regularity, stability and convergence to the stationary state for (strong) solutions in an appropriate Banach space. I will also present some applications and refinements of the above-mentioned results for specific models.

Tue, 03 Dec 2019
14:15
L4

Deformation of a Howe duality

Marcelo De Martino
(Oxford University)
Abstract

In this talk, I will report about a joint work with D. Ciubotaru, in which we investigate the Dunkl version of the classical Howe-duality (O(k),spo(2|2)). Similar Fischer-type decompositions were studied before in the works of Ben-Said, Brackx, De Bie, De Schepper, Eelbode, Orsted, Soucek and Somberg for other Howe-dual pairs. Our work builds on the notion of a Dirac operator for Drinfeld algebras introduced by Ciubotaru, which was inspired by the analogous theory for Lie algebras, as well as the work of Cheng and Wang on classical Howe dualities.

Tue, 26 Nov 2019
14:15
L4

Heisenberg groups and graded Lie algebras

Beth Romano
(Oxford University)
Abstract

I will talk about a way of building graded Lie algebras from certain Heisenberg groups. The input for this construction arises naturally when studying families of algebraic curves, and we'll look at some examples in which Lie theory interacts with number theory in an illuminating way. 

Mon, 09 Dec 2019

15:45 - 16:45
L3

Ito-Wentzell-Lions formula for measure dependent random fields under full and conditional measure flows

GONCALO DOS REIS
(University of Edinburgh)
Abstract


We present several Itô-Wentzell formulae on Wiener spaces for real-valued functionals random field of Itô type depending on measures. We distinguish the full- and marginal-measure flow cases. Derivatives with respect to the measure components are understood in the sense of Lions.
This talk is based on joint work with V. Platonov (U. of Edinburgh), see https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.01892.
 

Mon, 09 Dec 2019

14:15 - 15:45
L3

Low-dimensional quantum Yang-Mills measures

ILYA CHEVYREV
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Yang-Mills theory plays an important role in the Standard Model and is behind many mathematical developments in geometric analysis. In this talk, I will present several recent results on the problem of constructing quantum Yang-Mills measures in 2 and 3 dimensions. I will particularly speak about a representation of the 2D measure as a random distributional connection and as the invariant measure of a Markov process arising from stochastic quantisation. I will also discuss the relationship with previous constructions of Driver, Sengupta, and Lévy based on random holonomies, and the difficulties in passing from 2 to 3 dimensions. Partly based on joint work with Ajay Chandra, Martin Hairer, and Hao Shen.

Mon, 02 Dec 2019

14:15 - 15:15
L3

Asset Prices in Segmented and Integrated Markets

PAOLO GUASONI
(University of Dublin)
Abstract

This paper evaluates the effect of market integration on prices and welfare, in a model where two Lucas trees grow in separate regions with similar investors. We find equilibrium asset price dynamics and welfare both in segmentation, when each region holds its own asset and consumes its dividend, and in integration, when both regions trade both assets and consume both dividends. Integration always increases welfare. Asset prices may increase or decrease, depending on the time of integration, but decrease on average. Correlation in assets' returns is zero or negative before integration, but significantly positive afterwards, explaining some effects commonly associated with financialization.

epiflows: an R package for risk assessment of travel-related spread of disease.
Moraga, P Dorigatti, I Kamvar, Z Piatkowski, P Nagraj, V Donnelly, C Jombart, T F1000Research volume 7 (31 Aug 2018)

Oxford Mathematician Nils Matthes talks about trying to understand old numbers using new techniques.

"The Riemann zeta function is arguably one of the most important objects in arithmetic. It encodes deep information about the whole numbers; for example the celebrated Riemann hypothesis, which gives a precise location of its zeros, predicts deep information about the prime numbers. In my research, I am mostly interested in the special values of the Riemann zeta function at integers $k\geq 2$,

Finite open-world query answering with number restrictions
Amarilli, A Benedikt, M ACM Transactions on Computational Logic volume 21 issue 4 (05 Jul 2020)
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