Éz fields
Walsberg, E Ye, J Journal of Algebra volume 614 611-649 (18 Oct 2022)
Homotopy types of abstract elementary classes
Campion, T Ye, J Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra volume 225 issue 5 106461 (May 2021)
CLASSIFYING SPACES AND THE LASCAR GROUP
CAMPION, T COUSINS, G YE, J Journal of Symbolic Logic volume 86 issue 4 1396-1431 (13 Dec 2021)
Cohomology of algebraic varieties over non-archimedean fields
Kovacsics, P Edmundo, M Ye, J Forum of Mathematics Sigma volume 10 e94 (21 Oct 2022)
The étale open topology over the fraction field of a Henselian local domain
Johnson, W Walsberg, E Ye, J Mathematische Nachrichten volume 296 issue 5 1928-1937 (14 May 2023)
PETERZIL–STEINHORN SUBGROUPS AND -STABILIZERS IN ACF
Kamensky, M Starchenko, S Ye, J Journal of the Institute of Mathematics of Jussieu volume 22 issue 3 1003-1022 (21 May 2023)
Stable formulas in ordered structures
Hoffmann, D Tran, C Ye, J Israel Journal of Mathematics volume 254 issue 1 293-312 (28 Apr 2023)
Mon, 12 Jun 2023
16:00
L1

Departmental Colloquium

George Lusztig
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Further Information

George Lusztig is the Abdun-Nur Professor of Mathematics. He joined the MIT mathematics faculty in 1978 following a professorship appointment at the University of Warwick, 1974-77. He was appointed Norbert Wiener Professor at MIT 1999-2009.

Lusztig graduated from the University of Bucharest in 1968, and received both the M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1971 under the direction of Michael Atiyah and William Browder. Professor Lusztig works on geometric representation theory and algebraic groups. He has received numerous research distinctions, including the Berwick Prize of the London Mathematical Society (1977), the AMS Cole Prize in Algebra (1985), and the Brouwer Medal of the Dutch Mathematical Society (1999), and the AMS Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement (2008), "for entirely reshaping representation theory, and in the process changing much of mathematics."

Professor Lusztig is a Fellow of the Royal Society (1983), Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences (1991), and Member of the National Academy of Sciences (1992). He was the recipient of the Shaw Prize (2014) and the Wolf Prize (2022).

Fri, 09 Jun 2023
16:00
L2

North meets South

Dr Thomas Karam (North Wing) and Dr Hamid Rahkooy (South Wing)
Abstract

North Wing talk: Dr Thomas Karam
Title: Ranges control degree ranks of multivariate polynomials on finite prime fields.

Abstract: Let $p$ be a prime. It has been known since work of Green and Tao (2007) that if a polynomial $P:\mathbb{F}_p^n \mapsto \mathbb{F}_p$ with degree $2 \le d \le p-1$ is not approximately equidistributed, then it can be expressed as a function of a bounded number of polynomials each with degree at most $d-1$. Since then, this result has been refined in several directions. We will explain how this kind of statement may be used to deduce an analogue where both the assumption and the conclusion are strengthened: if for some $1 \le t < d$ the image $P(\mathbb{F}_p^n)$ does not contain the image of a non-constant one-variable polynomial with degree at most $t$, then we can obtain a decomposition of $P$ in terms of a bounded number of polynomials each with degree at most $\lfloor d/(t+1) \rfloor$. We will also discuss the case where we replace the image $P(\mathbb{F}_p^n)$ by for instance $P(\{0,1\}^n)$ in the assumption.

 

South Wing talk: Dr Hamid Rahkooy
Title: Toric Varieties in Biochemical Reaction Networks

Abstract: Toric varieties are interesting objects for algebraic geometers as they have many properties. On the other hand, toric varieties appear in many applications. In particular, dynamics of many biochemical reactions lead to toric varieties. In this talk we discuss how to test toricity algorithmically, using computational algebra methods, e.g., Gröbner bases and quantifier elimination. We show experiments on real world models of reaction networks and observe that many biochemical reactions have toric steady states. We discuss complexity bounds and how to improve computations in certain cases.

Fri, 02 Jun 2023
16:00
L1

OUI: Consultancy 101

Dawn Gordon, Project Manager
(Oxford University Innovation)
Abstract

Come to this session to learn how to get started in consultancy from Dawn Gordon at Oxford University Innovation (OUI). After an introduction to what consultancy is, we'll explore case studies of consultancy work performed by mathematicians and statisticians within the university. This session will also include practical advice on how you can explore consultancy opportunities alongside your research work, from finding potential clients to the support that OUI can offer.

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