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Events

Peter Markowich, University of Cambridge and University of Vienna, “A PDE system modeling biological network formation”

SAS 1102

Transportation networks are ubiquitous as they are possibly the most important building blocks of nature. They cover microscopic and macroscopic length scales and evolve on fast to slow times scales. Examples are networks of blood vessels in mammals, genetic regulatory networks and signaling pathways in biological cells, neural networks in mammalian brains, venation networks in…

Mark Giesbrecht, University of Waterloo, “Eigenvalues, invariant and random integer matrices”

SAS 1102

Integer matrices are often characterized by the lattice of combinations of their rows or columns. This is captured nicely by the Smith canonical form, a diagonal matrix of invariant factors, to which any integer matrix can be transformed through left and right multiplication by unimodular matrices. Algorithms for computing Smith forms have seen dramatic improvements…

Nicholas Higham, University of Manchester, “Challenges in multivalued matrix functions”

SAS 1102

Multivalued matrix functions arise in solving various kinds of matrix equations. The matrix logarithm is the prototypical example. Another example is the Lambert W function of a matrix, which is much less well known but has been attracting recent interest. A theme of the talk is the importance of choosing appropriate principal values and making…