Mon, 19 Jan 2026
15:30
L5

Complete classification of the Dehn functions of Bestvina—Brady groups

Jerónimo García-Mejía
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

Introduced by Bestvina and Brady in 1997, Bestvina—Brady groups form an important class of examples in geometric group theory and topology, known for exhibiting unusual finiteness properties. In this talk, I will focus on the Dehn functions of finitely presented Bestvina—Brady groups. Very roughly speaking, the Dehn function of a group measures how difficult it is to fill loops by discs in spaces associated to the group, and captures geometric information that is invariant under coarse equivalence. After reviewing known results, I will present a classification of the Dehn functions of Bestvina—Brady groups. This talk is based on joint work with Yu-Chan Chang and Matteo Migliorini.

Doncha love AI!! So clever! Does all your work in, like, one nanosecond! It's, like, your bestie!!
 
Doncha hate AI?? Thinks it's so clever! But you can't trust it!

To start Hilary term, join us in N4.01 on Friday 23rd at 12:30 pm for free pizza and a fun quiz competition. This is the perfect Mathematrix event to come to if you’ve been wanting to swing by for a while and haven’t had the opportunity. 

And see our term card below.

Tue, 10 Feb 2026
12:30
C4

Models for subglacial floods during surface lake drainage events

Harry Stuart
(OCIAM Oxford)
Abstract

As temperatures are increasing, so is the presence of meltwater lakes sitting on the surface of the Greenland Ice Sheet. Such lakes have the possibility of draining through cracks in the ice to the bedrock. Observed discharge rates have found that these lakes can drain at three times the flow rate of Niagara Falls. Current models of subglacial drainage systems are unable to cope with such a large and sudden volume of water. This motivates the idea of a 'subglacial blister' which propagates and slowly dissipates underneath the ice sheet. We present a basic hydrofracture model for understanding this process, before carrying out a number of extensions to observe the effects of turbulence, topography, leak-off and finite ice thickness.

AI assisted triage of UK patients in mental health care services: a qualitative focus group study of patients’ attitudes
Smith, K Hamer-Hunt, J Kormilitzin, A Page, H Joyce, D Cipriani, A BMC Psychiatry volume 26 issue 1 35 (13 Jan 2026)
Tue, 03 Feb 2026
15:30

Foundations for derived analytic and differential geometry

Kobi Kremnitzer
((Mathematical Institute University of Oxford))
Abstract

In this talk I will describe how bornological spaces give a foundation for derived geometries. This works over any Banach ring allowing to define analytic and differential geometry over the integers. I will discuss applications of this approach such as the representability of certain moduli spaces and Galois actions on the cohomology of differetiable manifolds admitting a \Q-form.

Causal transport on path space
Cont, R Lim, F Annals of Probability
Thu, 26 Feb 2026

12:00 - 12:30
Lecture Room 4, Mathematical Institute

TBA

Alan Muriithi
Abstract

TBA

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