Mon, 02 May 2016
14:15
L4

Untwisted and twisted open de Rham spaces

Michael Lennox Wong
(Duisburg-Essen University)
Abstract

 An "open de Rham space" refers to a moduli space of meromorphic connections on the projective line with underlying trivial bundle.  In the case where the connections have simple poles, it is well-known that these spaces exhibit hyperkähler metrics and can be realized as quiver varieties.  This story can in fact be extended to the case of higher order poles, at least in the "untwisted" case.  The "twisted" spaces, introduced by Bremer and Sage, refer to those which have normal forms diagonalizable only after passing to a ramified cover.  These spaces often arise as quotients by unipotent groups and in some low-dimensional examples one finds some well-known hyperkähler manifolds, such as the moduli of magnetic monopoles.  This is a report on ongoing work with Tamás Hausel and Dimitri Wyss.

Design and Performance of the OP2 Library for Unstructured Mesh Applications.
Bertolli, C Betts, A Mudalige, G Giles, M Kelly, P Euro-Par 2011: Parallel Processing Workshops volume 7155 191-200 (01 Jan 2011)
Performance analysis of the OP2 framework on many-core architectures
Giles, M Mudalige, G Sharif, Z Markall, G Kelly, P ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review volume 38 issue 4 9-15 (29 Mar 2011)
Predictive modeling and analysis of OP2 on distributed memory GPU clusters
Mudalige, G Giles, M Bertolli, C Kelly, P ACM SIGMETRICS Performance Evaluation Review volume 40 issue 2 61-67 (08 Oct 2012)
Mon, 23 May 2016
14:15
L4

Poncelet's theorem and Painleve VI

Vasilisa Shramchenko
(Universite de Sherbrooke)
Abstract

In 1995 N. Hitchin constructed explicit algebraic solutions to the Painlevé VI (1/8,-1/8,1/8,3/8) equation starting with any Poncelet trajectory, that is a closed billiard trajectory inscribed in a conic and circumscribed about another conic. In this talk I will show that Hitchin's construction is the Okamoto transformation between Picard's solution and the general solution of the Painlevé VI (1/8,-1/8,1/8,3/8) equation. Moreover, this Okamoto transformation can be written in terms of an Abelian differential of the third kind on the associated elliptic curve, which allows to write down solutions to the corresponding Schlesinger system in terms of this differential as well. This is a joint work with V. Dragovic.

Thu, 15 Dec 2016

17:00 - 18:00
L1

Oxford Mathematics Christmas Public Lecture: The Mathematics of Visual Illusions - Ian Stewart SOLD OUT

Ian Stewart
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

Puzzling things happen in human perception when ambiguous or incomplete information is presented to the eyes. Rivalry occurs when two different images, presented one to each eye, lead to alternating percepts, possibly of neither image separately. Illusions, or multistable figures, occur when a single image can be perceived in several ways. The Necker cube is the most famous example. Impossible objects arise when a single image has locally consistent but globally inconsistent geometry. Famous examples are the Penrose triangle and etchings by Maurits Escher.

In this lecture Ian Stewart will demonstrate how these phenomena provide clues about the workings of the visual system, with reference to recent research in the field which has modelled simplified, systematic methods by which the brain can make decisions. In these models a neural network is designed to interpret incoming sensory data in terms of previously learned patterns. Rivalry occurs when different interpretations are confused, and illusions arise when the same data have several interpretations.

The lecture will be non-technical and highly illustrated, with plenty of examples.

Please email @email to register

Thu, 09 Jun 2016

14:00 - 15:00
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, nr Didcot

Conditioning of Optimal State Estimation Problems

Prof. Nancy Nichols
(Reading University)
Abstract

To predict the behaviour of a dynamical system using a mathematical model, an accurate estimate of the current state of the system is needed in order to initialize the model. Complete information on the current state is, however, seldom available. The aim of optimal state estimation, known in the geophysical sciences as ‘data assimilation’, is to determine a best estimate of the current state using measured observations of the real system over time, together with the model equations. The problem is commonly formulated in variational terms as a very large nonlinear least-squares optimization problem. The lack of complete data, coupled with errors in the observations and in the model, leads to a highly ill-conditioned inverse problem that is difficult to solve.

To understand the nature of the inverse problem, we examine how different components of the assimilation system influence the conditioning of the optimization problem. First we consider the case where the dynamical equations are assumed to model the real system exactly. We show, against intuition, that with increasingly dense and precise observations, the problem becomes harder to solve accurately. We then extend these results to a 'weak-constraint' form of the problem, where the model equations are assumed not to be exact, but to contain random errors. Two different, but mathematically equivalent, forms of the problem are derived. We investigate the conditioning of these two forms and find, surprisingly, that these have quite different behaviour.

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