Wednesday, April 15, 2015 - 14:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Guillermo Rey – Michigan State
We will prove a pointwise estimate for positive dyadic shifts of complexitym which is linear in the complexity. This can be used to give a pointwiseestimate for Calderon-Zygmund operators and to answer a question posed byA. Lerner. Several applications will be discussed.- This is joint work with Jose M. Conde-Alonso.
Tuesday, April 14, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Pierre-Emmanuel Jabin – University of Maryland, College Park
We consider some recent models from stochastic or optimal control
involving a very large number of agents. The goal is to derive mean
field limits when the number of agents increases to infinity. This
presents some new unique difficulties; the corresponding master equation
is a non linear Hamilton-Jacobi equation for instance instead of the
linear transport equations that are more typical in the usual mean field
limits. We can nevertheless pass to the limit by looking at the problem
from an optimization point of view and by using an appropriate kinetic
formulation. This is a joint work with S. Mischler, E. Sere, D. Talay.
It is a well understood story that one can extract linkinvariants associated to simple Lie algebras. These invariants arecalled Reshetikhin-Turaev invariants and the famous Jones polynomialis the simplest example. Kauffman showed that the Jones polynomialcould be described very simply by replacing crossings in a knotdiagram by various smoothings. In this talk we will explainCautis-Kamnitzer-Licata's simple new approach to understanding theseinvariants using basic representation theory and the quantum Weylgroup action. Their approach is based on a version of Howe duality forexterior algebras called skew-Howe duality. Even the graphical (orskein theory) description of these invariants can be recovered in anelementary way from this data. The advantage of this approach isthat it suggests a `categorification' where knot homology theoriesarise in an elementary way from higher representation theory and thestructure of categorified quantum groups. Joint work with David Rose and Hoel Queffelec
We introduce a new parallel in time (parareal) algorithm which couples multiscale integrators with fully resolved fine scale integration and computes highly oscillatory solutions for a class of ordinary differential equations in parallel.
The algorithm computes a low-cost approximation of all slow variables in the system. Then, fast phase-like variables are obtained using the parareal iterative methodology and an alignment algorithm. The method may be used either to enhance the accuracy and range of applicability of the multiscale method in approximating only the slow variables, or to resolve all the state variables. The numerical scheme does not require that the system is split into slow and fast coordinates. Moreover, the dynamics may involve hidden slow variables, for example, due to resonances.
Monday, April 13, 2015 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Alex Haro – Univ. of Barcelona
We present a method to find KAM tori with fixed frequency in
degenerate cases, in which the Birkhoff normal form is singular.
The method provides a natural classification of
KAM tori which is based on Singularity Theory. The
method also leads to effective algorithms of computation,
and we present some numerical results up to the verge of breakdown.
This is a joint work with Alejandra Gonzalez and Rafael de la Llave.
Saturday, April 11, 2015 - 13:00 for 4 hours (half day)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
David Conlon – University of Oxford
Emory University, Georgia Tech and Georgia State University, with support from the
National Science Foundation, will continue the
series of mini-conferences and host a series of 9 new mini-conferences from
2014-2017. The 15th of these mini-conferences will be held at
Georgia Tech during April 11-12, 2015. The conferences will stress a variety of
areas and feature one prominent researcher giving 2 fifty minute lectures and 4
outstanding researchers each giving one fifty minute lecture. There will also be
several 25 minute lecturers by younger researchers or graduate students.
For more details, see the
schedule
Saturday, April 11, 2015 - 09:30 for 8 hours (full day)
Location
Skiles
Speaker
Multiple speakers – Varies
The goal of this one day meeting is for people at nearby universities to get to know each other. We will have eight 30 minute talks, with ample time remaining for discussions and exchanging ideas.
All are welcome. Please register at https://sites.google.com/site/magaspring15/
Friday, April 10, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 202
Speaker
Andrzej Swiech – Georgia Tech
I will give a series of elementary lectures presenting basic
regularity theory of second order HJB equations. I will introduce the notion of viscosity
solution and I will
discuss basic techniques, including probabilistic techniques and
representation formulas.
Regularity results will be discussed in three cases: degenerate
elliptic/parabolic,
weakly nondegenerate, and uniformly elliptic/parabolic.
Friday, April 10, 2015 - 15:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Cynthia Vinzant – North Carolina State
A reciprocal linear space is the image of a linear space under
coordinate-wise inversion. This nice algebraic variety appears in many
contexts and its structure is governed by the combinatorics of the
underlying hyperplane arrangement. A reciprocal linear space is also an
example of a hyperbolic variety, meaning that there is a family of
linear spaces all of whose intersections with it are real. This special
real structure is witnessed by a determinantal representation of its
Chow form in the Grassmannian. In this talk, I will introduce reciprocal
linear spaces and discuss the relation of their algebraic properties to
their combinatorial and real structure.