15:45
Probability theory of {nα}
Abstract
The sequence {nα}, where α is an irrational number and {.} denotes fractional part, plays
a fundamental role in probability theory, analysis and number theory. For suitable α, this sequence provides an example for "most uniform" infinite sequences, i.e. sequences whose discrepancy has the
smallest possible order of magnitude. Such 'low discrepancy' sequences have important applications in Monte Carlo integration and other problems of numerical mathematics. For rapidly increasing nk the behaviour of {nkα} is similar to that of independent random variables, but its asymptotic properties depend strongly also on the number theoretic properties of nk, providing a simple example for pseudorandom behaviour. Finally, for periodic f the sequence f(nα) provides a generalization of the trig-onometric system with many interesting properties. In this lecture, we give a survey of the field (going back more than 100 years) and formulate new results.
14:15
On the stochastic nonlinear Schrödinger equation
Abstract
We consider a non linear Schrödinger equation on a compact manifold of dimension d subject to some multiplicative random perturbation. Using some stochastic Strichartz inequality, we prove the existence and uniqueness of a maximal solution in H^1 under some general conditions on the diffusion coefficient. Under stronger conditions on the noise, the nonlinearity and the diffusion coefficient, we deduce the existence of a global solution when d=2. This is a joint work with Z. Brzezniak.
15:45
'Phase transitions for dilute particle systems with Lennard-Jones potential'
Abstract
We consider a dilute stationary system of N particles uniformly distributed in space and interacting pairwise according to a compactly supported potential, which is repellent at short distances and attractive at moderate distances. We are interested in the large-N behaviour of the system. We show that at a certain scale there are phase transitions in the temperature parameter and describe the energy and ground states explicitly in terms of a variational problem
14:15
New algebraic and physical approaches of fractional stochastic calculus
Abstract
Rough path theory, invented by T. Lyons, is a successful and general method for solving ordinary or stochastic differential equations driven by irregular H\"older paths, relying on the definition of a finite number of substitutes of iterated integrals satisfying definite algebraic and regularity properties.
Although these are known to exist, many questions are still open, in
particular: (1) "how many" possible choices are there ? (2) how to construct one explicitly ? (3) what is the connection to "true" iterated integrals obtained by an approximation scheme ?
In a series of papers, we (1) showed that "formal" rough paths (leaving aside
regularity) were exactly determined by so-called "tree data"; (2) gave several explicit constructions, the most recent ones relying on quantum field renormalization methods; (3) obtained with J. Magnen (Laboratoire de Physique Theorique, Ecole Polytechnique) a L\'evy area for fractional Brownian motion with Hurst index <1/4 as the limit in law of iterated integrals of a non-Gaussian interacting process, thus calling for a redefinition of the process itself. The latter construction belongs to the field of high energy physics, and as such established by using constructive field theory and renormalization; it should extend to a general rough path (work in progress).
15:45
Spectral asymptotics for continuum random trees
Abstract
We review the problem of determining the high frequency asymptotics of the spectrum of the Laplacian and its relationship to the geometry of a domain. We then establish these asymptotics for some continuum random trees as well as the scaling limit of the critical random graph.
14:15
Joint continuity for the solutions to a class of nonlinear SPDEs
Abstract
For a superprocess in a random environment in one dimensional space, a nonlinear stochastic partial differential equation is derived for its density by Dawson-Vaillancourt-Wang (2000). The joint continuity was left as an open problem. In this talk, we will give an affirmative answer to this problem.
Time inconsistent stochastic control" (joint with Agatha Murgoci and Xunyu Zhou)
Abstract
"We present a theory for stochastic control problems which, in various ways, are time inconsistent in the sense that they do not admit a Bellman optimality principle. We attach these problems by viewing them within a game theoretic framework, and we look for subgame perfect Nash equilibrium points.
For a general controlled Markov process and a fairly general objective functional we derive an extension of the standard Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation, in the form of a system of non-linear equations. We give some concrete examples, and in particular we study the case of mean variance optimal portfolios with wealth dependent risk aversion"
15:45
Gaussian Heat Hernel bounds for the Random Walk on Non-Uniformaly elliptic Graphs
14:15