Skip to main content

Events

Raghavendra Venkatraman, Carnegie Mellon University, Interfaces and Defects in Heterogeneous and Anisotropic Media: From Materials Science to Geometric Flows

Zoom

Energy-driven pattern formation is ubiquitous in nature; the character and dynamics of such patterns is selected as local minimizers and gradient flows, respectively, of non-convex, and often, non-local energies with multiple spatio-temporal scales. Analysis of such patterns sheds valuable insight upon their origins, and from the viewpoint of applications, is necessary for their control. In this talk, after introducing a…

Sam Hopkins, University of Minnesota, Order Polynomial Product Formulas and Poset Dynamics

Zoom

Sam Hopkins will present a heuristic for finding special families of partially ordered sets. The heuristic says that the posets with order polynomial product formulas are the same as the posets with good dynamical behavior. Here the order polynomial is a certain enumerative invariant of the poset. Meanwhile, the dynamics includes promotion of linear extensions,…

Alexandru Hening, Tufts, A general theory of coexistence for ecological communities

Zoom

A fundamental problem from population biology is finding conditions under which interacting species coexist or go extinct. I present results that lay the foundation for a general theory of stochastic coexistence. This theory extends and makes rigorous Modern Coexistence Theory and leads to resolving a number of conjectures due to Chesson, Ellner, and Palis. I…

Laura Colmenarejo, University of Massachusetts- Amherst, An insertion algorithm on multiset partitions with applications to diagram algebras

Zoom

In algebraic combinatorics, the Robinson-Schensted-Knuth algorithm is a fundamental correspondence between words and pairs of semistandard tableaux illustrating identities of dimensions of irreducible representations of several groups. In this talk, I will present a generalization of the Robinson-Schensted-Knuth algorithm to the insertion of two-row arrays of multisets. This generalization leads to new enumerative results that have…

Andy Manion, USC, Heegaard Floer homology in topology and representation theory

Zoom

I will give a tour of the origins of Heegaard Floer homology and its applications in topology and representation theory, highlighting recent work that relates Heegaard Floer homology with a tensor product operation for higher representations as well as with new geometric constructions. https://sites.google.com/usc.edu/manion/home

Simone Rossi, UNC Chapel Hill, Mathematical and Computational Modeling of the Heart

Zoom

Cardiovascular diseases are a major health and economic concern both in the U.S. and worldwide. Although recent breakthroughs in medical treatments for heart diseases have improved patient outcomes, the complex interplay between many interconnected physical phenomena has been a major obstacle in understanding the physiology of the heart and integrating it in mathematical models. By…

Zixuan Cang, UC Irvine, Topological and Geometric Data Analysis Meets Data-driven Biology

Zoom

Topological and geometric data analysis (TGDA) is a powerful framework for quantitative description and simplification of datasets' shapes. It is especially suitable for modern biological data that are intrinsically complex and high-dimensional. Traditional topological data analysis considers the geometric features of a dataset, while in practice, there could be both geometric and non-geometric features. In…

Martin Helmer, Effective Methods in Algebraic Geometry and Applications

Zoom

At its most basic, algebraic geometry studies algebraic varieties; that is, the solution sets of systems of polynomial equations. In this talk our focus is on developing a concrete understanding of the geometry and topology of varieties and using this understanding to obtain practical and effective computational methods. Such methods may then in turn be…

Michelle Chu, University of Illinois Chicago, Virtual properties of 3-manifolds

Zoom

A virtual property of a 3-manifold is a property satisfied by a finite cover of the 3-manifold. The study of such properties has been at the heart of several major developments in 3-manifold topology in the past decade. In this talk I will provide motivation and background on these virtual properties and discuss some recent results. Zoom…

Diego Cifuentes, MIT, Advancing scalable, provable optimization methods in semidefinite & polynomial programs

Zoom

Optimization is a broad area with ramifications in many disciplines, including machine learning, control theory, signal processing, robotics, computer vision, power systems, and quantum information. I will talk about some novel algorithmic and theoretical results in two broad classes of optimization problems. The first class of problems are semidefinite programs (SDP). I will present the…

Anna Weigandt, University of Michigan, Gröbner Geometry of Schubert Polynomials Through Ice

Zoom

Schubert calculus has its origins in enumerative questions asked by the geometers of the 19th century, such as "how many lines meet four fixed lines in three-space?"  These problems can be recast as questions about the structure of cohomology rings of geometric spaces such as flag varieties.  Borel's isomorphism identifies the cohomology of the complete…

Alexander Volberg, Michigan State University, Multi-parameter Poincaré inequality, multi-parameter Carleson embedding: Box condition versus Chang–Fefferman condition.

Zoom

Carleson embedding theorem is a building block for many singular integral operators and the main instrument in proving ``Leibniz rule" for fractional derivatives (Kato--Ponce, Kenig). It is also an essential step in all known ``corona theorems’’. Multi-parameter embedding is a tool to prove more complicated Leibniz rules that are also widely used in well-posedness questions…