Fast and Slow Optimal Trading with Exogenous Information
Cont, R Micheli, A Neuman, E
Cross-Relation Characterization of Knowledge Networks
Tokuda, E Lambiotte, R Costa, L (27 Jun 2023)
Raphtory: The temporal graph engine for Rust and Python
Steer, B Arnold, N Ba, C Lambiotte, R Yousaf, H Jeub, L Murariu, F Kapoor, S Rico, P Chan, R Chan, L Alford, J Clegg, R Cuadrado, F Barnes, M Zhong, P Biyong, J Alnaimi, A (28 Jun 2023)
Aspects of Categorical Symmetries from Branes: SymTFTs and Generalized Charges
Apruzzi, F Bonetti, F Gould, D Schafer-Nameki, S (28 Jun 2023)
Symmetries of many-body systems imply distance-dependent potentials
Utterson, J Erban, R Physical Review E volume 108 (21 Jul 2023)
Mean-field Analysis of Generalization Errors
Aminian, G Cohen, S Szpruch, Ł (20 Jun 2023)
Data for paper "The effect of pore-scale contaminant distribution on the reactive decontamination of porous media"
Luckins, E Breward, C Griffiths, I Please, C (01 Jan 2023)
Fluid-flow effects in the reactive decontamination of porous materials driven by chemical swelling or contraction
Geng, Y Kamilova, A Luckins, E Journal of Engineering Mathematics volume 141 (05 Aug 2023)
Tue, 28 Nov 2023
15:00
L1

Fixed points of group homomorphisms and the Post Correspondence Problem

Laura Ciobanu
Abstract

The Post Correspondence Problem (PCP) is a classical problem in computer science that can be stated as: is it decidable whether given two morphisms g and h between two free semigroups $A$ and $B$, there is any nontrivial $x$ in $A$ such that $g(x)=h(x)$? This question can be phrased in terms of equalisers, asked in the context of free groups, and expanded: if the `equaliser' of $g$ and $h$ is defined to be the subgroup consisting of all $x$ where $g(x)=h(x)$, it is natural to wonder not only whether the equaliser is trivial, but what its rank or basis might be. 

While the PCP for semigroups is famously insoluble and acts as a source of undecidability in many areas of computer science, the PCP for free groups is open, as are the related questions about rank, basis, or further generalisations. In this talk I will give an overview of what is known about the PCP in hyperbolic groups, nilpotent groups and beyond (joint work with Alex Levine and Alan Logan).

Tue, 21 Nov 2023
15:00
L1

Residual finiteness and actions on trees

Gareth Wilkes
Abstract

One of the more common ways to study a residually finite group (or its profinite completion) is via breaking it down into a graph of groups in some way. The descriptions of this theory generally found in the literature are highly algebraic and difficult to digest. I will present alternative, more geometric, definitions and perspectives on these theories based on properties of virtually free groups and their profinite completions.

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