Nonnegative curvature and pseudoisotopies
- Series
- Geometry Topology Seminar
- Time
- Monday, November 24, 2014 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Igor Belegradek – Georgia Tech
Biography: Michael Levitt is an American-British-Israeli biophysicist and professor of structural biology in<br />
the Stanford University School of Medicine and a winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Born<br />
in South Africa in 1947, Levitt earned his Bachelor of Science in Physics from Kings College<br />
London and his Ph.D. in biophysics from Cambridge University. His research involves multi-scale<br />
approaches to molecular modeling: Coarse-grained models that merge atoms to allow folding<br />
simulation and hybrid models that combine classical and quantum mechanics to explain how enzymes<br />
works by electrostatic strain. Levitt's diverse interests have included RNA and DNA modeling,<br />
protein folding simulation, classification of protein folds and protein geometry, antibody<br />
modeling, x-ray refinement, antibody humanization, side-chain geometry, torsional normal mode,<br />
molecular dynamics in solution, secondary structure prediction, aromatic hydrogen bonds, structure<br />
databases, and mass spectrometry. His Stanford research team currently works on protein evolution,<br />
the crystallographic phase problem and Cryo-EM refinement. He is a member of both the Royal<br />
Society of London and the U.S. National Academy of Science. Levitt also remains an active computer<br />
programmer--"a craft skill of which I am particularly proud," he says.
Host: College of Sciences, Georgia Tech
Anna Vershynina is a job candidate. She is a Mathematical Physicist working on the rigorous mathematical theory of N-body problem and its relation with quantum information.
Colm Mulcahy is a professor of mathematics at Spelman College, in Atlanta, where he has<br />
taught since 1988. He's currently on leave in the DC area. Over the last decade, he has<br />
been at the forefront of publishing new mathemagical principles and effects for cards,<br />
particularly in his long-running bi-monthly Card Colm for the MAA. Some of his puzzles<br />
have been featured in the New York Times. His book <br />
<a href="http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466509764" target="_blank">Mathematical Card Magic: Fifty-Two New Effects</a> was published by AK Peters/CRC Press in 2013.<br />
Colm is a recipient of MAA's Allendoerfer Award for excellence in expository writing, for<br />
an article on image compression using wavelets.
This is a project for Prof. Margalit's course on Low-dimensional Topology and Hyperbolic Geometry.