Glimpses of Lipschitz Truncations & Regularity
Abstract
This will be an overview of Prof Stroffolini's research and precursor to the eight-hour mini-course Prof Stroffolini will be giving later in October.
This will be an overview of Prof Stroffolini's research and precursor to the eight-hour mini-course Prof Stroffolini will be giving later in October.
Milnor has shown that three-dimensional Lie groups with left invariant Riemannian metrics furnish examples of 3-manifolds with principal Ricci curvatures of fixed signature --- except for the signatures (-,+,+), (0,+,-), and (0,+,+). We examine these three cases on a Riemannian 3-manifold, and prove global obstructions in certain cases. For example, if the manifold is closed, then the signature (-,+,+) is not globally possible if it is of the form -µ,f,f, with µ a positive constant and f a smooth function that never takes the values 0,-µ (this generalizes a result by Yamato '91). Similar obstructions for the other cases will also be discussed. Our methods of proof rely upon frame techniques inspired by the Newman-Penrose formalism. Thus, we will close by turning our attention to four dimensions and Lorentzian geometry, to uncover a relation between null vector fields and exact symplectic forms, with relations to Weinstein structures.
I will discuss theta-stability, a framework for analyzing moduli problems in algebraic geometry by finding a special kind of stratification called a theta-stratification, a notion which generalizes the Kempf-Ness stratification in geometric invariant theory and the Harder-Narasimhan-Shatz stratification of the moduli of vector bundles on a Riemann surface.
We present McEliece encryption scheme and some well-known proposals based on various families of error correcting codes. We introduce several methods for cryptanalysis in order to study the security of the presented proposals.
In 1943 Fisher, together with Corbet and Williams, published a study on the relation between the number of species and the number of individuals, which has since been recognized as one of the most influential papers in 20th century ecology. It was a combination of empirical work backed up by a simple theoretical argument, which describes a sort of universal law governing random partitions, such as the celebrated Ewens partition whose original derivation flows from the Fisher-Wright model. This talk will discuss several empirical studies of a similar sort, including Taylor's law and recent work related to Fairfield-Smith's work on the variance of spatial averages.