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Events

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…

Elections and Ice Cream Social

SAS 3281

Come relax with some free ice cream and AWM at our end of the year ice cream social! We will also be electing officers for next year at this event.

Mark Shimozono, Virginia Tech, “Quiver Hall-Littlewood symmetric functions and Kostka-Shoji polynomials”

SAS 1102

We associate to any quiver a family of symmetric functions, defined by creation operators which are generalizations of Jing's creation operators. For the cyclic quiver the coefficient polynomials were studied by Finkelberg and Ionov. Shoji has recently shown that the single variable specialization of the Finkelberg-Ionov polynomials agree with polynomials he studied in relation to…

TAGMaC conference at Duke

Duke Physics Buiding Durham, NC, United States

This semester, the Duke University AMS and SIAM graduate student chapters will host the biannual Triangle Area Graduate Mathematics Conference (TAGMaC). The event will occur on Sunday April 23 in the Duke Physics Building. The plenary speaker will be new UNC Professor Dave Rose. The organizers are Hangjie Ji, Sarah Ritchey, Shan Shan, and Dmitry…

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…

Weekly Brown Bag Lunch

SAS 4104

Please join us for our last weekly brown bag lunch of the year! You bring your lunch, and we will bring a delicious treat. Everyone (not just women) is welcome to join or stop by for as long as they can!

Ephraim Bililign, Taylor Garnowski, William Reese and Brandon Summers, NC State Undergraduate Student Honors Presentations

1. Ephraim Bililign Title: Measuring the temperature of granular systems Abstract: Granular systems, or collections of athermal mesoscale particles, are immune to temperature in the conventional sense. Thus, to describe the behavior of an jammed assortment of grains, we turn to a modified thermodynamics built on forces and volumes. I will discuss the experimental measurements…

Nam Le, Indiana University, “The Monge-Ampere eigenvalue problem and global smoothness of the eigenfunctions”

SAS 4201

In this talk, I will first introduce the Monge-Ampere eigenvalue problem on general bounded convex domains and related analysis. Then I will discuss the recent resolution, in joint work with Ovidiu Savin, of global smoothness of the eigenfunctions of the Monge-Ampere operator on smooth, bounded and uniformly convex domains in all dimensions. A key ingredient…

Beverly Setzer, Samuel Weber and Christopher Cardullo, NC State Undergraduate Student Honors Presentations

1. Beverly Setzer Title: Detecting Hidden Nodes in Neuronal Networks using Adaptive Filtering Abstract: The identification of network connectivity from noisy time series is of great interest in the study of network dynamics. This connectivity estimation problem becomes more complicated when we consider the possibility of hidden nodes within the network. These hidden nodes act…

Vladimir Baranovsky, UC Irvine, “Factorization homology and graph homology”

SAS 4201

We give a brief overview of factorization homology theory due to Ayala, Francis and Tanaka and explain how it leads to a (still mostly conjectural) generalization of graph homology to homotopy commutative algebras, and an efficient computation of knot invariants coming from factorization homology (at least for alternating links).

MGSA and AMS Cinco de Mayo Celebration

SAS 4104

MGSA and AMS will be providing free Moes burritos to celebrate Cinco de Mayo and the end of the semester! All math grad students are welcome, but you must RSVP by Wednesday, May 3 at noon if you plan to eat a burrito. For info about how to RSVP, please email mgsa.ncstate@gmail.com. All math grad…