Colloquia/Fall18: Difference between revisions
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| Bing Wang | | Bing Wang |
Revision as of 16:32, 9 February 2018
Mathematics Colloquium
All colloquia are on Fridays at 4:00 pm in Van Vleck B239, unless otherwise indicated.
Spring 2018
date | speaker | title | host(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 29 (Monday) | Li Chao (Columbia) | Elliptic curves and Goldfeld's conjecture | Jordan Ellenberg | |
February 2 (Room: 911) | Thomas Fai (Harvard) | The Lubricated Immersed Boundary Method | Spagnolie, Smith | |
February 5 (Monday, Room: 911) | Alex Lubotzky (Hebrew University) | High dimensional expanders: From Ramanujan graphs to Ramanujan complexes | Ellenberg, Gurevitch | |
February 6 (Tuesday 2 pm, Room 911) | Alex Lubotzky (Hebrew University) | Groups' approximation, stability and high dimensional expanders | Ellenberg, Gurevitch | |
February 9 | Wes Pegden (CMU) | The fractal nature of the Abelian Sandpile | Roch | |
March 2 | Aaron Bertram (University of Utah) | TBA | Caldararu | |
March 16 | Anne Gelb (Dartmouth) | TBA | WIMAW | |
April 4 (Wednesday) | John Baez (UC Riverside) | TBA | Craciun | |
April 6 | Reserved | TBA | Melanie | |
April 13 | Jill Pipher (Brown) | TBA | WIMAW | |
April 20 | Xiuxiong Chen(Stony Brook University) | TBA | Bing Wang | |
April 25 (Wednesday) | Hitoshi Ishii (Waseda University) Wasow lecture | TBA | Tran | |
date | person (institution) | TBA | hosting faculty | |
date | person (institution) | TBA | hosting faculty | |
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date | person (institution) | TBA | hosting faculty | |
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date | person (institution) | TBA | hosting faculty | |
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Spring Abstracts
January 29 Li Chao (Columbia)
Title: Elliptic curves and Goldfeld's conjecture
Abstract: An elliptic curve is a plane curve defined by a cubic equation. Determining whether such an equation has infinitely many rational solutions has been a central problem in number theory for centuries, which lead to the celebrated conjecture of Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer. Within a family of elliptic curves (such as the Mordell curve family y^2=x^3-d), a conjecture of Goldfeld further predicts that there should be infinitely many rational solutions exactly half of the time. We will start with a history of this problem, discuss our recent work (with D. Kriz) towards Goldfeld's conjecture and illustrate the key ideas and ingredients behind these new progresses.
February 2 Thomas Fai (Harvard)
Title: The Lubricated Immersed Boundary Method
Abstract: Many real-world examples of fluid-structure interaction, including the transit of red blood cells through the narrow slits in the spleen, involve the near-contact of elastic structures separated by thin layers of fluid. The separation of length scales between these fine lubrication layers and the larger elastic objects poses significant computational challenges. Motivated by the challenge of resolving such multiscale problems, we introduce an immersed boundary method that uses elements of lubrication theory to resolve thin fluid layers between immersed boundaries. We apply this method to two-dimensional flows of increasing complexity, including eccentric rotating cylinders and elastic vesicles near walls in shear flow, to show its increased accuracy compared to the classical immersed boundary method. We present preliminary simulation results of cell suspensions, a problem in which near-contact occurs at multiple levels, such as cell-wall, cell-cell, and intracellular interactions, to highlight the importance of resolving thin fluid layers in order to obtain the correct overall dynamics.
February 5 Alex Lubotzky (Hebrew University)
Title: High dimensional expanders: From Ramanujan graphs to Ramanujan complexes
Abstract:
Expander graphs in general, and Ramanujan graphs , in particular, have played a major role in computer science in the last 5 decades and more recently also in pure math. The first explicit construction of bounded degree expanding graphs was given by Margulis in the early 70's. In mid 80' Margulis and Lubotzky-Phillips-Sarnak provided Ramanujan graphs which are optimal such expanders.
In recent years a high dimensional theory of expanders is emerging. A notion of topological expanders was defined by Gromov in 2010 who proved that the complete d-dimensional simplical complexes are such. He raised the basic question of existence of such bounded degree complexes of dimension d>1.
This question was answered recently affirmatively (by T. Kaufman, D. Kazdhan and A. Lubotzky for d=2 and by S. Evra and T. Kaufman for general d) by showing that the d-skeleton of (d+1)-dimensional Ramanujan complexes provide such topological expanders. We will describe these developments and the general area of high dimensional expanders.
February 6 Alex Lubotzky (Hebrew University)
Title: Groups' approximation, stability and high dimensional expanders
Abstract:
Several well-known open questions, such as: are all groups sofic or hyperlinear?, have a common form: can all groups be approximated by asymptotic homomorphisms into the symmetric groups Sym(n) (in the sofic case) or the unitary groups U(n) (in the hyperlinear case)? In the case of U(n), the question can be asked with respect to different metrics and norms. We answer, for the first time, one of these versions, showing that there exist fintely presented groups which are not approximated by U(n) with respect to the Frobenius (=L_2) norm.
The strategy is via the notion of "stability": some higher dimensional cohomology vanishing phenomena is proven to imply stability and using high dimensional expanders, it is shown that some non-residually finite groups (central extensions of some lattices in p-adic Lie groups) are Frobenious stable and hence cannot be Frobenius approximated.
All notions will be explained. Joint work with M, De Chiffre, L. Glebsky and A. Thom.
February 9 Wes Pegden (CMU)
Title: The fractal nature of the Abelian Sandpile
Abstract: The Abelian Sandpile is a simple diffusion process on the integer lattice, in which configurations of chips disperse according to a simple rule: when a vertex has at least 4 chips, it can distribute one chip to each neighbor.
Introduced in the statistical physics community in the 1980s, the Abelian sandpile exhibits striking fractal behavior which long resisted rigorous mathematical analysis (or even a plausible explanation). We now have a relatively robust mathematical understanding of this fractal nature of the sandpile, which involves surprising connections between integer superharmonic functions on the lattice, discrete tilings of the plane, and Apollonian circle packings. In this talk, we will survey our work in this area, and discuss avenues of current and future research.