Tue, 26 Nov 2024
13:00
L2

Late time saturation of the Einstein-Rosen bridge dual to the Double Scaled SYK model

Vijay Balasubramanian
(UPenn and Oxford)
Abstract

In this talk I will explain how the size of the Einstein-Rosen (ER) bridge dual to the Double Scaled SYK (DSSYK) model saturates at late times because of finiteness of the underlying quantum Hilbert space.  I will extend recent work implying that the ER bridge size equals the spread complexity of the dual DSSYK theory with an appropriate initial state.  This work shows that the auxiliary "chord basis'' used to solve the DSSYK theory is the physical Krylov basis of the spreading quantum state.  The ER bridge saturation follows from the vanishing of the Lanczos spectrum, derived by methods from Random Matrix Theory (RMT).

Generalization and Robustness of the Tilted Empirical Risk
Aminian, G Asadi, A Li, T Beirami, A Reinert, G Cohen, S (28 Sep 2024) http://arxiv.org/abs/2409.19431v3
Matrix-weighted networks for modeling multidimensional dynamics
Tian, Y Kojaku, S Sayama, H Lambiotte, R (07 Oct 2024)
Guest Editorial Special Feature on Seeing Through the Crowd: Molecular Communication in Crowded and Multi-Cellular Environments
Noel, A Eckford, A Erban, R Icardi, M Reeves, G IEEE Transactions on Molecular Biological and Multi-Scale Communications volume 10 issue 3 422-424 (01 Sep 2024)
Mon, 25 Nov 2024
16:00
C3

Gap distributions and the Metric Poissonian Property 

Sophie Maclean
(King's College London)
Abstract
When studying dilated arithmetic sequences, it is natural to wonder about their distribution. Whilst it is relatively achievable to ascertain whether the resulting sequence is equidistributed, is it much more difficult to say much about gap size between consecutive elements of the new set? In this talk I will explore the gap distributions in dilated arithmetic sequences modulo 1, including what it means for a sequence to have the metric poissonian property. I will also give an overview of the current progress and what I am aiming to discover in my own work.
 
 
Mon, 21 Oct 2024
16:00
C3

Monochromatic non-commuting products

Matt Bowen
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

We show that any finite coloring of an amenable group contains 'many' monochromatic sets of the form $\{x,y,xy,yx\},$ and natural extensions with more variables.  This gives the first combinatorial proof and extensions of Bergelson and McCutcheon's non-commutative Schur theorem.  Our main new tool is the introduction of what we call `quasirandom colorings,' a condition that is automatically satisfied by colorings of quasirandom groups, and a reduction to this case.

Thu, 13 Mar 2025
16:00
Lecture Room 4

Fourier Asymptotics and Effective Equidistribution

Subhajit Jana
(Queen Mary University of London)
Abstract

We talk about effective equidistribution of the expanding horocycles on the unit cotangent bundle of the modular surface with respect to various classes of Borel probability measures on the reals, depending on their Fourier asymptotics.  This is a joint work with Shreyasi Datta.

Mon, 14 Oct 2024
16:00
C3

Self-Similar Sets and Self-Similar Measures

Constantin Kogler
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

We give a gentle introduction to the theory of self-similar sets and self-similar measures. Connections of this topic to Diophantine approximation on Lie groups as well as to additive combinatorics will be exposed. In particular, we will discuss recent progress on Bernoulli convolutions. If time permits, we mention recent joint work with Samuel Kittle on absolutely continuous self-similar measures. 
 

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