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<b>UW Madison mathematics Colloquium is on Fridays at 4:00 pm. </b>
<b>UW Madison mathematics Colloquium is on Fridays at 4:00 pm in Van Vleck B239 unless otherwise noted.</b>
==Fall 2023==


<!--- in Van Vleck B239, '''unless otherwise indicated'''. --->
{| cellpadding="8"
!align="left" | date 
!align="left" | speaker
!align="left" | title
!align="left" | host(s)
|
|-
|Sept 8
|[https://www.uwlax.edu/profile/tdas/ Tushar Das] (University of Wisconsin-La Crosse)
|Playing games on fractals: Dynamical & Diophantine |  Playing games on fractals: Dynamical & Diophantine
|Stovall
|-
|Sept 15
|[https://math.yale.edu/people/john-schotland John Schotland] (Yale)
|Nonlocal PDEs and Quantum Optics
|Li
|-
|Sept 22
|[https://www.dumas.io/ David Dumas](University of Illinois Chicago)
|Geometry of surface group homomorphisms
|Zimmer
|-
|Sept 29
|''no colloquium (see Monday)''
|
|
|-
|<b>Monday Oct 2 at 4 pm</b>
|[https://www.math.tamu.edu/~titi/ Edriss Titi]  (Texas A&M University)
|Distinguished lectures: On the Solvability of the Navier-Stokes and Euler Equations, where do we stand?
|Smith, Stechmann
|-
|Oct 13
|Autumn Kent
|The 0π Theorem
|
|-
|Oct 20
|Sara Maloni (UVA)
|''TBA''
|Dymarz, Uyanik, GmMaW
|-
|<b>Wednesday Oct 25 at 4 pm</b>
|[https://math.mit.edu/~gigliola/ Gigliola Staffilani] (MIT)
|The  Schrödinger equations as inspiration of beautiful mathematics
|Ifrim, Smith
|-
|Oct 27
|[https://www.math.purdue.edu/people/bio/banuelos/home Rodrigo Bañuelos] (Purdue)
|''TBA''
|Stovall
|-
|<b>Tuesday Oct 31 at 4 pm</b>
|[https://www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~dinuri/ Irit Dinur] (The Weizmann Institute of Science)
|Distinguished lectures
|Gurevich
|-
|<b>Wednesday Nov 1 at 4 pm</b>
|[https://www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~dinuri/ Irit Dinur] (The Weizmann Institute of Science)
|Distinguished lectures
|Gurevich
|}


=Fall 2021=
==Abstracts==


== Sep. 17, 2021, B239, [https://markshus.wixsite.com/math Mark Shusterman] (Harvard) ==


(hosted by Gurevich)


'''Finitely Presented Groups in Arithmetic Geometry'''
'''Friday, September 8.  Tushar Das'''


I will report on recent works, in part joint with Esnault—Srinivas, and with Jarden, on the finite presentability of several (profinite) groups arising in algebraic geometry and in number theory. These results build on a cohomological criterion of Lubotzky involving Euler characteristics. I will try to explain the analogy, rooted in arithmetic topology, between these results and classical facts about fundamental groups of three-dimensional manifolds.
Playing games on fractals: Dynamical & Diophantine
We will present sketches of a program, developed in collaboration with Lior Fishman, David Simmons, and Mariusz Urbanski, which extends the parametric geometry of numbers (initiated by Wolfgang Schmidt and Leonhard Summerer) to Diophantine approximation for systems of m linear forms in n variables. Our variational principle (arXiv:1901.06602) provides a unified framework to compute Hausdorff and packing dimensions of a variety of sets of number-theoretic interest,  as well as their dynamical counterparts via the Dani correspondence. Highlights include the introduction of certain combinatorial objects that we call templates, which arise from a dynamical study of Minkowski’s successive minima in the geometry of numbers; as well as a new variant of Schmidt’s game designed to compute the Hausdorff and packing dimensions of any set in a doubling metric space. The talk will be accessible to students and faculty whose interests contain a convex combination of homogeneous dynamics, Diophantine approximation and fractal geometry.


== Sep. 24, 2021 , [https://math.wisc.edu/staff/paul-sean/ Sean Paul] (UW-Madison) ==


'''Friday, September 15. John Schotland'''


Nonlocal PDEs and Quantum Optics
Quantum optics is the quantum theory of the interaction of light and matter. In this talk, I will describe a real-space formulation of quantum electrodynamics with applications to many body problems. The goal is to understand the transport of nonclassical states of light in random media. In this setting, there is a close relation to kinetic equations for nonlocal PDEs with random coefficients.


== October 8, 2021, Zoom, [https://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/people/jon.chapman Jon Chapman] (University of Oxford) ==


(Wasow lecture; hosted by Thiffeault)
'''Friday, September 22. David Dumas'''


== October 11, 13, 15, 2021 '''[Mon, Wed, Fri 4-5pm]''', [https://www.maths.usyd.edu.au/u/geordie/ Geordie Williamson] (University of Sydney) ==
The space of homomorphisms from the fundamental group of a compact surface to a Lie group is a remarkably rich and versatile object, playing a key role in mathematical developments spanning disciplines of algebra, analysis, geometry, and mathematical physics.  In this talk I will discuss and weave together two threads of research within this larger story: 1) the study of manifolds that are obtained by taking quotients of symmetric spaces (the "inside view") and 2) those obtained as quotients of domains in flag varieties (the "boundary view").  This discussion will start with classical objects--hyperbolic structures on surfaces---and continue into topics of ongoing research.


(Special lecture series; hosted by Gurevich)


== October 22, 2021 , [https://math.berkeley.edu/people/faculty/vera-serganova Vera Serganova] (UC Berkeley) ==
'''Friday, October 13. Autumn Kent'''


(hosted by Gurevich/Gorin)
A celebrated theorem of Thurston tells us that among the many ways of filling in cusps of hyperbolic $3$--manfiolds, all but finitely many of them produce hyperbolic manifolds once again. This finiteness may be refined in a number of ways depending on the ``shape’’ of the cusp, and I’ll give a light and breezy discussion of joint work with K. Bromberg and Y. Minsky that allows shapes not covered by any of the previous theorems. This has applications such as answering questions asked in my 2010 job talk here at UW.


== October 29, 2021 , [https://web.math.princeton.edu/~aionescu/ Alexandru Ionescu] (Princeton University) ==
==Future Colloquia==


(hosted by Wainger)
[[Colloquia/Spring2024|Spring 2024]]


== November 5, 2021 , [https://faculty.washington.edu/jathreya/ Jayadev S. Athreya] (University of Washington) ==
== Past Colloquia ==
 
(hosted by Uyanik)
 
== November 12, 2021 , [https://sites.tufts.edu/kasso/ Kasso Okoudjou] (Tufts University) ==
 
(hosted by Stovall)
 
== Nov. 19, 2021 , [https://math.wisc.edu/ TBA] (TBA) ==
 
(reserved by the hiring committee)
 
== Dec. 3, 2021 , [https://math.wisc.edu/ TBA] (TBA) ==
 
(reserved by the hiring committee)
 
== Dec. 10, 2021 , [https://math.wisc.edu/ TBA] (TBA) ==
 
(reserved by the hiring committee)


[[Colloquia/Spring2023|Spring 2023]]


[[Colloquia/Fall2022|Fall 2022]]


== Future ==
[[Spring 2022 Colloquiums|Spring 2022]]


[[Colloquia/Spring2022|Spring 2022]]
[[Colloquia/Fall2021|Fall 2021]]
 
== Past Colloquia ==


[[Colloquia/Spring2021|Spring 2021]]
[[Colloquia/Spring2021|Spring 2021]]

Latest revision as of 08:42, 27 September 2023


UW Madison mathematics Colloquium is on Fridays at 4:00 pm in Van Vleck B239 unless otherwise noted.

Fall 2023

date speaker title host(s)
Sept 8 Tushar Das (University of Wisconsin-La Crosse) Playing games on fractals: Dynamical & Diophantine Stovall
Sept 15 John Schotland (Yale) Nonlocal PDEs and Quantum Optics Li
Sept 22 David Dumas(University of Illinois Chicago) Geometry of surface group homomorphisms Zimmer
Sept 29 no colloquium (see Monday)
Monday Oct 2 at 4 pm Edriss Titi (Texas A&M University) Distinguished lectures: On the Solvability of the Navier-Stokes and Euler Equations, where do we stand? Smith, Stechmann
Oct 13 Autumn Kent The 0π Theorem
Oct 20 Sara Maloni (UVA) TBA Dymarz, Uyanik, GmMaW
Wednesday Oct 25 at 4 pm Gigliola Staffilani (MIT) The  Schrödinger equations as inspiration of beautiful mathematics Ifrim, Smith
Oct 27 Rodrigo Bañuelos (Purdue) TBA Stovall
Tuesday Oct 31 at 4 pm Irit Dinur (The Weizmann Institute of Science) Distinguished lectures Gurevich
Wednesday Nov 1 at 4 pm Irit Dinur (The Weizmann Institute of Science) Distinguished lectures Gurevich

Abstracts

Friday, September 8. Tushar Das

Playing games on fractals: Dynamical & Diophantine We will present sketches of a program, developed in collaboration with Lior Fishman, David Simmons, and Mariusz Urbanski, which extends the parametric geometry of numbers (initiated by Wolfgang Schmidt and Leonhard Summerer) to Diophantine approximation for systems of m linear forms in n variables. Our variational principle (arXiv:1901.06602) provides a unified framework to compute Hausdorff and packing dimensions of a variety of sets of number-theoretic interest,  as well as their dynamical counterparts via the Dani correspondence. Highlights include the introduction of certain combinatorial objects that we call templates, which arise from a dynamical study of Minkowski’s successive minima in the geometry of numbers; as well as a new variant of Schmidt’s game designed to compute the Hausdorff and packing dimensions of any set in a doubling metric space. The talk will be accessible to students and faculty whose interests contain a convex combination of homogeneous dynamics, Diophantine approximation and fractal geometry.


Friday, September 15. John Schotland

Nonlocal PDEs and Quantum Optics Quantum optics is the quantum theory of the interaction of light and matter. In this talk, I will describe a real-space formulation of quantum electrodynamics with applications to many body problems. The goal is to understand the transport of nonclassical states of light in random media. In this setting, there is a close relation to kinetic equations for nonlocal PDEs with random coefficients.


Friday, September 22. David Dumas

The space of homomorphisms from the fundamental group of a compact surface to a Lie group is a remarkably rich and versatile object, playing a key role in mathematical developments spanning disciplines of algebra, analysis, geometry, and mathematical physics. In this talk I will discuss and weave together two threads of research within this larger story: 1) the study of manifolds that are obtained by taking quotients of symmetric spaces (the "inside view") and 2) those obtained as quotients of domains in flag varieties (the "boundary view"). This discussion will start with classical objects--hyperbolic structures on surfaces---and continue into topics of ongoing research.


Friday, October 13. Autumn Kent

A celebrated theorem of Thurston tells us that among the many ways of filling in cusps of hyperbolic $3$--manfiolds, all but finitely many of them produce hyperbolic manifolds once again. This finiteness may be refined in a number of ways depending on the ``shape’’ of the cusp, and I’ll give a light and breezy discussion of joint work with K. Bromberg and Y. Minsky that allows shapes not covered by any of the previous theorems. This has applications such as answering questions asked in my 2010 job talk here at UW.

Future Colloquia

Spring 2024

Past Colloquia

Spring 2023

Fall 2022

Spring 2022

Fall 2021

Spring 2021

Fall 2020

Spring 2020

Fall 2019

Spring 2019

Fall 2018

Spring 2018

Fall 2017

Spring 2017

Fall 2016

Spring 2016

Fall 2015

Spring 2015

Fall 2014

Spring 2014

Fall 2013

Spring 2013

Fall 2012

WIMAW