Thu, 09 Oct 2025

14:00 - 15:00
(This talk is hosted by Rutherford Appleton Laboratory)

HSS iteration for solving the indefinite Helmholtz equation by multigrid with standard components

Colin Cotter
(Imperial College, London)
Abstract

We provide an iterative solution approach for the indefinite Helmholtz equation discretised using finite elements, based upon a Hermitian Skew-Hermitian Splitting (HSS) iteration applied to the shifted operator, and prove that the iteration is k- and mesh-robust when O(k) HSS iterations are performed. The HSS iterations involve solving a shifted operator that is suitable for approximation by multigrid using standard smoothers and transfer operators, and hence we can use O(N) parallel processors in a high performance computing implementation, where N is the total number of degrees of freedom. We argue that the algorithm converges in O(k) wallclock time when within the range of scalability of the multigrid. We provide numerical results verifying our proofs and demonstrating this claim, establishing a method that can make use of large scale high performance computing systems.

 

 

This talk is hosted by Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and will take place @ Harwell Campus, Didcot, OX11 0QX

Fri, 29 Aug 2025
12:30

TBA

Colin Cotter
(Imperial College, London)
Abstract

TBA

Decoding how higher-order network interactions shape contagion dynamics
Kiss, I Bick, C Simon, P Journal of Mathematical Biology volume 91 issue 3 (19 Aug 2025)
Equivariant localization for D=4 gauged supergravity
Sparks, J Gauntlett, J Luscher, A Benetti Genolini, P Jiao, Y Journal of High Energy Physics (JHEP)
Photo of folding paper
Historically, buckling has been regarded as a route to failure and structural collapse, and its study has been driven by the need to prevent its catastrophic consequences. However, in recent years, a novel perspective has emerged. The control of buckling, and mechanical instabilities more broadly, has potential to actuate new functionalities in engineered structures. This paradigm shift has also led to the identification of buckling as a means to render functionality in natural systems.
Thu, 30 Oct 2025

16:00 - 17:00
Lecture Room 4

Prime number models and the interval sieve

Kevin Ford
(UIUC)
Abstract

We'll describe connections between probabilistic models for primes,
the Hardy-Littlewood k-tuples conjectures, the distribution of primes in
very short intervals, the interval sieve, and hypothetical Landau-Siegel
zeros of Dirichlet L-functions.  We will emphasize the role and limitations
of probabilistic ideas.

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Balister, P Bollobás, B Morris, R Smith, P Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society volume 310 issue 1571 (10 Jun 2025)
The structure of sets with cube‐avoiding sumsets
Karam, T Keevash, P Mathematika volume 71 issue 4 (20 Aug 2025)
Control of McKean-Vlasov SDEs with contagion through killing at a state dependent intensity
Hambly, B Jettkant, P Annals of Applied Probability
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