Seminars and Colloquia by Series

On the chemical distance in critical percolation

Series
Stochastics Seminar
Time
Thursday, September 3, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Michael DamronSchool of Mathematics, Georgia Tech
In two-dimensional critical percolation, the work of Aizenman-Burchard implies that macroscopic distances inside percolation clusters are bounded below by a power of the Euclidean distance greater than 1+\epsilon, for some positive \epsilon. No more precise lower bound has been given so far. Conditioned on the existence of an open crossing of a box of side length n, there is a distinguished open path which can be characterized in terms of arm exponents: the lowest open path crossing the box. This clearly gives an upper bound for the shortest path. The lowest crossing was shown by Morrow and Zhang to have volume n^4/3 on the triangular lattice. In 1992, Kesten and Zhang asked how, given the existence of an open crossing, the length of the shortest open crossing compares to that of the lowest; in particular, whether the ratio of these lengths tends to zero in probability. We answer this question positively.

Hyperbolic Geometry

Series
Geometry Topology Student Seminar
Time
Wednesday, September 2, 2015 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Jonathan PaprockiGeorgia Tech
We review the basics of hyperbolic geometry in preparation for studying mapping class groups.

KAM Theory without Action-angle Variables and its Extension to Presymplectic Dynamical Systems

Series
Dynamical Systems Working Seminar
Time
Tuesday, September 1, 2015 - 17:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Jiaqi YangGeorgia Tech
We will discuss KAM results for symplectic and presymplectic maps. Firstly, we will study geometric properties of a symplectic dynamical system which will allow us to prove a KAM theorem in a-posteriori format. Then, a corresponding theorem for a parametric family of symplectic maps will be presented. Finally, using similar method, we will extend the theorems to presymplectic maps. These results appear in the work of Alishah, de la Llave, Gonzalez, Jorba and Villanueva.

Instability index, exponential trichotomy, and invariant manifolds for Hamiltonian PDEs: Part I

Series
PDE Seminar
Time
Tuesday, September 1, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Zhiwu LinSchool of Mathematics, Georgia Tech
Consider a general linear Hamiltonian system u_t = JLu in a Hilbert space X, called the energy space. We assume that R(L) is closed, L induces a bounded and symmetric bi-linear form on X, and the energy functional has only finitely many negative dimensions n(L). There is no restriction on the anti-selfadjoint operator J except \ker L \subset D(J), which can be unbounded and with an infinite dimensional kernel space. Our first result is an index theorem on the linear instability of the evolution group e^{tJL}. More specifically, we obtain some relationship between n(L) and the dimensions of generalized eigenspaces of eigenvalues of JL, some of which may be embedded in the continuous spectrum. Our second result is the linear exponential trichotomy of the evolution group e^{tJL}. In particular, we prove the nonexistence of exponential growth in the finite co-dimensional center subspace and the optimal bounds on the algebraic growth rate there. This is applied to construct the local invariant manifolds for nonlinear Hamiltonian PDEs near the orbit of a coherent state (standing wave, steady state, traveling waves etc.). For some cases (particularly ground states), we can prove orbital stability and local uniqueness of center manifolds. We will discuss applications to examples including dispersive long wave models such as BBM and KDV equations, Gross-Pitaevskii equation for superfluids, 2D Euler equation for ideal fluids, and 3D Vlasov-Maxwell systems for collisionless plasmas. This work will be discussed in two talks. In the first talk, we will motivate the problem by several Hamiltonian PDEs, describe the main results, and demonstrate how they are applied. In the second talk, some ideas of the proof will be given.

Symmetric powers and the étale Dold-Thom theorem

Series
Algebra Seminar
Time
Monday, August 31, 2015 - 15:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Arnav TripathyStanford University
After reminding everyone why the symmetric powers Sym^n X of a scheme arise and are interesting from the point of view of the Weil conjectures, I'll recall the Dold-Thom theorem of algebraic topology, which governs the behavior of symmetric powers of a topological space. I'll then explain how the notion of étale homotopy allows us to compare these two realms of arithmetic geometry and algebraic topology, providing a homotopical refinement of a small part of the Weil conjectures.

Braid groups, Burau representations, and algebraic curves

Series
Geometry Topology Seminar
Time
Monday, August 31, 2015 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Weiyan ChenU Chicago
The theory of étale cohomology provides a bridge between two seemingly unrelated subjects: the homology of braid groups (topology) and the number of points on algebraic varieties over finite fields (arithmetic). Using this bridge, we study two problems, one from topology and one from arithmetic. First, we compute the homology of the braid groups with coefficients in the Burau representation. Then, we apply the topological result to calculate the expected number of points on a random superelliptic curve over finite fields.

Algorithm Frameworks Based on Structure Preserving Sampling

Series
Joint ACO and ARC Colloquium
Time
Monday, August 31, 2015 - 13:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Klaus 1116
Speaker
Richard PengSchool of Computer Science, Georgia Tech
Sampling is a widely used algorithmic tool: running routines on a small representative subset of the data often leads to speedups while preserving accuracy. Recent works on algorithmic frameworks that relied on sampling graphs and matrices highlighted several connections between graph theory, statistics, optimization, and functional analysis. This talk will describe some key ideas that emerged from these connections: (1) Sampling as a generalized divide-and-conquer paradigm. (2) Implicit sampling without constructing the larger data set, and its algorithmic applications. (3)What does sampling need to preserve? What can sampling preserve? These ideas have applications in solvers for structured linear systems, network flow algorithms, input-sparsity time numerical routines, coresets, and dictionary learning.

Invariant Manifolds of Multi Interior Spike States for the Cahn-Hilliard Equation

Series
CDSNS Colloquium
Time
Monday, August 31, 2015 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Jiayin JinGeorgia Inst. of Technology
We construct invariant manifolds of interior multi-spike states for the nonlinear Cahn-Hilliard equation and then investigate the dynamics on it. An equation for the motion of the spikes is derived. It turns out that the dynamics of interior spikes has a global character and each spike interacts with all the others and with the boundary. Moreover, we show that the speed of the interior spikes is super slow, which indicates the long time existence of dynamical multi-spike solutions in both positive and negative time. This result is obtained through the application of a companion abstract result concerning the existence of truly invariant manifolds with boundary when one has only approximately invariant manifolds.

Sobolev orthogonal polynomials in several variables

Series
Analysis Seminar
Time
Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Lidia FernandezApplied Math Dept, University of Granada
The purpose of this talk is to introduce some recent works on the field of Sobolev orthogonal polynomials. I will mainly focus on our two last works on this topic. The first has to do with orthogonal polynomials on product domains. The main result shows how an orthogonal basis for such an inner product can be constructed for certain weight functions, in particular, for product Laguerre and product Gegenbauer weight functions. The second one analyzes a family of mutually orthogonal polynomials on the unit ball with respect to an inner product which involves the outward normal derivatives on the sphere. Using the representation of these polynomials in terms of spherical harmonics, algebraic and analytic properties will be deduced. First, we will get connection formulas relating classical multivariate orthogonal polynomials on the ball with our family of Sobolev orthogonal polynomials. Then explicit expressions for the norms will be obtained, among other properties.

Dynamics for the Fractional Nonlinear Schrodinger Equation

Series
PDE Seminar
Time
Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Shihui ZhuDepartment of Mathematics, Sichuan Normal University
In this talk, we consider the dynamical properties of solutions to the fractional nonlinear Schrodinger equation (FNLS, for short) arising from pseudorelativistic Boson stars. First, by establishing the profile decomposition of bounded sequences in H^s, we find the best constant of a Gagliardo-Nirenberg type inequality. Then, we obtain the stability and instability of standing waves for (FNLS) by the profile decomposition. Finally, we investigate the dynamical properties of blow-up solutions for (FNLS), including sharp threshold mass, concentration and limiting profile. (Joint joint with Jian Zhang)

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