Tue, 21 Jan 2020

12:00 - 13:00
C1

Generative models and representational learning on street networks

Mateo Neira
(University College London)
Abstract

Cities are now central to addressing global changes, ranging from climate change to economic resilience. There is a growing concern of how to measure and quantify urban phenomena, and one of the biggest challenges in quantifying different aspects of cities and creating meaningful indicators lie in our ability to extract relevant features that characterize the topological and spatial patterns of urban form. Many different models that can reproduce large-scale statistical properties observed in systems of streets have been proposed, from spatial random graphs to economical models of network growth. However, existing models fail to capture the diversity observed in street networks around the world. The increased availability of street network datasets and advancements in deep learning models present a new opportunity to create more accurate and flexible models of urban street networks, as well as capture important characteristics that could be used in downstream tasks.  We propose a simple approach called Convolutional-PCA (ConvPCA) for both creating low-dimensional representations of street networks that can be used for street network classification and other downstream tasks, as well as a generating new street networks that preserve visual and statistical similarity to observed street networks.

Link to the preprint

Fri, 25 Oct 2019

12:45 - 13:45
C3

Toric geometry

Sebastjan Cizel
(University of Oxford)
Fri, 22 Nov 2019

15:00 - 16:00
N3.12

Configuration spaces of particles and phase transitions

Matt Kahle
(Ohio State University)
Abstract

Configuration spaces of points in Euclidean space or on a manifold are well studied in algebraic topology. But what if the points have some positive thickness? This is a natural setting from the point of view of physics, since this the energy landscape of a hard-spheres system. Such systems are observed experimentally to go through phase transitions, but little is known mathematically.

In this talk, I will focus on two special cases where we have started to learn some things about the homology: (1) hard disks in an infinite strip, and (2) hard squares in a square or rectangle. We will discuss some theorems and conjectures, and also some computational results. We suggest definitions for "homological solid, liquid, and gas" regimes based on what we have learned so far.

This is joint work with Hannah Alpert, Ulrich Bauer, Robert MacPherson, and Kelly Spendlove.

Tue, 05 Nov 2019

15:30 - 16:30
L4

Hilbert schemes of points of ADE surface singularities

Balazs Szendroi
(Oxford)
Abstract

I will discuss some recent results around Hilbert schemes of points on singular surfaces, obtained in joint work with Craw, Gammelgaard and Gyenge, and their connection to combinatorics (of coloured partitions) and representation theory (of affine Lie algebras and related algebras such as their W-algebra). 

Mon, 11 Nov 2019

16:00 - 17:00
C1

On Serre's Uniformity Conjecture

Jay Swar
(Oxford)
Abstract

Given a prime p and an elliptic curve E (say over Q), one can associate a "mod p Galois representation" of the absolute Galois group of Q by considering the natural action on p-torsion points of E.

In 1972, Serre showed that if the endomorphism ring of E is "minimal", then there exists a prime P(E) such that for all p>P(E), the mod p Galois representation is surjective. This raised an immediate question (now known as Serre's uniformity conjecture) on whether P(E) can be bounded as E ranges over elliptic curves over Q with minimal endomorphism rings.

I'll sketch a proof of this result, the current status of the conjecture, and (time permitting) some extensions of this result (e.g. to abelian varieties with appropriately analogous endomorphism rings).

Mon, 04 Nov 2019
12:45
L3

Supersymmetric phases of N = 4 SYM at large N

Alejandro Cabo Bizet
(King's College London)
Abstract

We show the existence of an infinite family of complex saddle-points at large N, for the matrix model of the superconformal index of SU(N) N = 4 super Yang-Mills theory on S3 × S1 with one chemical potential τ. The saddle-point configurations are labelled by points (m,n) on the lattice Λτ = Z τ + Z with gcd(m, n) = 1. The eigenvalues at a given saddle are uniformly distributed along a string winding (m, n) times along the (A, B) cycles of the torus C/Λτ . The action of the matrix model extended to the torus is closely related to the Bloch-Wigner elliptic dilogarithm, and its values at (m,n) saddles are determined by Fourier averages of the latter along directions of the torus. The actions of (0,1) and (1,0) agree with that of pure AdS5 and the Gutowski-Reall AdS5 black hole, respectively. The actions of the other saddles take a surprisingly simple form. Generically, they carry non vanishing entropy. The Gutowski-Reall black hole saddle dominates the canonical ensemble when τ is close to the origin, and other saddles dominate when τ approaches rational points. 

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