Math Calendar

Thursday, November 21, 2024
13:00-17:00
Minnaert 2.02
Topology InterCity Seminar
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
Applied Math Seminar
Johan Dubbeldam -- Battling resistance with mathematics
In many diseases (including cancer and bacterial infections) resistance is developed against
treatment. In this talk I will discuss two mathematical approaches to understand what we
can do to increase our understanding of resistance and how we exploit this when encountering resistant populations. I will focus on certain game theoretical models and affine control as simple models for resistance.
Friday, November 22, 2024
11:00-13:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Michal Wrochna and Juri Sampieri Bjornsson – b-geometry and asymptotic analysis
Melrose's b-geometry provides a framework for dealing with problems of partial differential equations that arise in singular, degenerate or non compact geometric situations. This talk will give a brief outline, focusing particularly on the role of b-geometry in the asymptotic analysis of PDEs.

In the first part, we will introduce the fundamentals of b-geometry, including the notions of b-metrics and b-vector bundles on manifolds with boundaries.

The second part will shift to an analytical focus, exploring the asymptotic behavior of solutions to the Klein-Gordon equation on asymptotically de Sitter manifolds. We will introduce the essential analytical tools for this, such as b-differential operators and their normal operators, conormal and polyhomogeneous functions, and the Mellin transform.
15:00-17:00
BBG169
Factorisation homology seminar
Guy Boyde - Examples of factorisation homology
Monday, November 25, 2024
10:15-12:00
HFG 707
Log Stacks Seminar
Log schemes 1/2

Speaker: Boaz Moerman.

Content: Monoids, log structures, log schemes, morphisms of log schemes, examples: divisorial log structure, toric varieties (in particular Spec Z[P ] for a monoid P ), examples of a non-divisorial log structure (pullback of a log structure, example of a log curve (without definition of a log curve)).

13:00-13:45
HFG 7.07
LENT seminar talk
Florian Wilsch (Göttingen) - Integral points on affine cubic surfaces
Abstract: We develop a heuristic for the number of integral solutions to cubic equations in three variables based on the circle method, predicting a logarithmic order of magnitude. This generalizes Heath-Browns conjecture on the number of representations k = x³ + y³ + z³ of an integer k (that is not a perfect cube) as a sum of three cubes. The heuristic can be tested against asymptotic formulae by Zagier on the Markoff surface and by Baragar and Umeda on variants of it. Moreover, we obtained numerical data on some families of surfaces to test our heuristic against.
This is joint work with Tim Browning.
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
11:00-13:00
HFG 7.07B
Mini-course on Synthetic Spectra
Sven van Nigtevecht - Obstruction theories
TBA
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Tom Manopulo (Utrecht University)
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
MI talk
Olivier de Gaay Fortman - TBA
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, November 28, 2024
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
Applied Math Seminar
Florian Beier (Technische Universität Berlin)
Title: A Geometric Optimal Transport Framework for 3D Shape Interpolation

Abstract: The Gromov-Wasserstein (GW) transport problem is a generalization of the classic optimal transport problem, which seeks a relaxed correspondence between two measures while preserving their internal geometry. Due to meeting this theoretical underpinning, it is a valuable tool for the analysis of objects that do not possess a natural embedding or should be studied independently of it. Prime applications can thus be found in e.g. shape matching, classification and interpolation tasks. To tackle the latter, one theoretically justified approach is the employment of GW barycenters, which are generalized Fréchet means with respect to the GW distance.

After giving a gentle and illustrative introduction to classic optimal transport theory we will thoroughly explore the GW transport problem. Subsequently we turn our attention to GW barycenters. Motivated by obtaining a numerically tractable method for their computation, we study the geometry of the induced GW space. Our theoretical results in this context allow us to lift a known fixpoint iteration for the computation of Fréchet means in Riemannian manifolds to the GW setting. The lifted iteration is simple to implement in practice and monotonically improves the quality of the barycenter. We provide numerical evidence of the potential of this method, including multi 3d shape interpolations.

Friday, November 29, 2024
11:00-12:00
HFG 707
Number Theory talk
Jakub Byszewski (Krakow)

Abstract. We study generalised polynomials, that is, functions that can be expressed using standard algebraic operations and the floor function. Generalised polynomials have long been studied (both explicitly and implicitly) in number theory and dynamics, often using dynamical and ergodic-theoretic methods (especially dynamics on nilmanifolds). These methods enable one to deduce precise information about the average behaviour of generalised polynomials, but allow for complicated behaviour on special sets of density zero. We will present some of the classical results and give examples of various interesting arithmetic and combinatorial behaviour occurring along sets of density zero as well as restrictions to what is possible. We will also state an analogue of Hadamard's quotient theorem for generalised polynomials (the classical version concerns linear recurrences). Several open problems will be formulated.

The talk is based on joint work with Jakub Konieczny (Oxford).
15:00-17:00
VU, Maryam
Factorisation homology seminar
Remy van Dobben de Bruyn - Nonabelian Poincaré duality
Monday, December 2, 2024
10:15-12:00
HFG 707
Log Stacks Seminar
13:00-14:00
HFG 707
LENT Seminar talk
Ezra Waxman (U Littoral) - Artin's primitive root conjecture
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
11:00-13:00
HFG 7.07B
Mini-course on Synthetic Spectra
Sven van Nigtevecht - Construction and variants of synthetic spectra
TBA
13:00-14:00
AG Seminar
Ariyan Javanpeykar (RU Nijmegen) on "The weakly special conjecture contradicts orbifold Mordell, and thus abc."
Note different time and location. Part of the Rational Points Consortium meeting: https://www.rationalpoints.nl/events-2/.

Abstract:  Lang conjectured that varieties of general type over a number field do not have a dense set of rational points.  In 2000, guided by Lang's conjecture and in search of a converse statement, Abramovich, Colliot-Thelene, Harris, and Tschinkel formulated the "Weakly Special Conjecture": every weakly special variety over a number field has a potentially dense set of rational points. In this talk I will explain how this conjecture contradicts the abc conjecture, and more precisely Campana's "Orbifold Mordell" conjecture. Indeed, starting from an Enriques surface over Q(t) constructed by Lafon, we give the first examples of smooth projective weakly special threefolds which fiber over the projective line in Enriques surfaces   with nowhere reduced, but non-divisible, fibers. I will explain that the existence of these  threefolds shows that the Weakly Special Conjecture contradicts the abc conjecture. The existence of such threefolds also shows that Enriques surfaces and K3 surfaces can have non-divisible but nowhere reduced degenerations, thereby answering a question raised by Campana in 2005. This is joint work with Finn Bartsch, Frederic Campana, and Olivier Wittenberg.

Location: TBA.
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, December 5, 2024
16:00-17:00
Applied math seminar Jiasheng Lin (Sorbonne Université)
Friday, December 6, 2024
11:00-16:00
JKH 2-3, room 115
Mark Kac seminar in probability and physics with Marcin Lis (TU Wien) and Frank den Hollander (U Leiden)

Morning session:

 

Speaker: Marcin Lis  (TU Wien)
Title: Around the planar Ising model 

 

Abstract: In the first part I will talk about the classical result of Groeneveld, Boel and Kasteleyn that boundary spin correlations functions 

in Ising models on planar graphs satisfy Pfaffian relations. I will consider the reverse question, and 
show that any classical ferromagnetic spin model whose correlation functions satisfy Pfaffian relations must be 
(up to local simplifications of the graph) an Ising model on a planar graph. The main tool is a new (coupled) version 
of the Edwards—Sokal (Fortuin—Kasteleyn) representation of the Ising model applied to two independent copies of the spin model.
Joint work with Diederik van Engelenburg.

 

In the second part I will discuss a geometric formula for a certain set of complex zeros of the partition function of the planar Ising model recently proposed by Livine and Bonzom. Remarkably, the zeros depend locally on the geometry of an immersion of the graph in the three dimensional Euclidean space (different immersions give rise to different zeros). When restricted to the flat case, the weights become the critical weights on circle patterns. I will rigorously prove the formula by geometrically constructing a null eigenvector of the Kac-Ward matrix whose determinant is the squared partition function. The main ingredient of the proof is the realisation that the associated Kac-Ward transition matrix gives rise to an SU(2) connection on the graph, creating a direct link with rotations in three dimensions. The existence of a null eigenvector turns out to be equivalent to this connection being flat.

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 115 at 11-12.45

 

Afternoon session:

 

Speaker: Frank den Hollander (U Leiden)

Title: The Moran model with random resampling rates

 

Abstract: We consider the two-type Moran model with N individuals. Each individual is assigned a resampling rate, drawn independently from a probability distribution ℙ on ℝ+, and a type, either ♡ or ♢. Each individual resamples its type at its assigned rate, by adopting the type of an individual drawn uniformly at random. Let YN(t) denote the empirical distribution of the resampling rates of the individuals with type ♡ at time Nt. We show that if ℙ has countable support and satisfies certain tail and moment conditions, then in the limit as N→∞ the process (YN(t))t≥0 converges in law to the process (S(t)ℙ)t≥0, in the so-called Meyer-Zheng topology, where (S(t))t≥0 is the Fisher-Wright diffusion with diffusion constant D given by 1/D=∫ℝ+(1/r)ℙ(dr). 

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 115, 14.15-16.00

Monday, December 9, 2024
10:15-12:00
HFG 707
Log Stacks Seminar
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Andreas Hochenegger (Politecnico di Milano)
TBA
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
MI talk
Jaco Ruit - TBA
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, December 12, 2024
16:00-17:00
HFG611
Applied math seminar Jean-Jacques Herings (Tilburg)
Friday, December 13, 2024
15:00-17:00
BBG077
Factorisation homology seminar
Niall Taggart - Filtrations on factorisation homology and Goodwillie calculus
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
UGC colloquium
Teun van Nuland (TU Delft) - TBA
Wednesday, December 18, 2024
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Wednesday, December 25, 2024
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Wednesday, January 1, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Tuesday, January 7, 2025
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, January 9, 2025
16:15-17:15
Academy Building
Inaugural address
Tristan van Leeuwen - t.b.a.
Monday, January 13, 2025
10:15-12:00
HFG 707
Log Stacks Seminar
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Ekin Ozman (U. of Groningen)
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Monday, January 20, 2025
10:15-12:00
HFG 707
Log Stacks Seminar
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Martin Ulirsch (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main)
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Monday, January 27, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
13:30-14:30
AG Seminar
Martin Lüdtke (University of Groningen)
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, February 6, 2025
16:00-17:00
HFG611
Janusz Meylahn (UTwente)
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Wednesday, February 19, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, February 20, 2025
16:00-17:00
HFG611
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Sophia Wiechert (RWTH Aachen)
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, February 27, 2025
16:00-17:00
HFG611
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Florian Wagener (UvA)
Monday, March 3, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Monday, March 10, 2025
16:15-17:15
Academy Building
naugural address
Daniel Dadush - t.b.a.
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Thursday, March 20, 2025
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Satoshi Fukuda (Bocconi University)
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar

This seminarwill explore important themes in modern homotopy theory, focusing onTopological Hochschild Homology (THH), Topological Cyclic Homology (TC), andtheir applications in algebraic K-theory, with a special emphasis on tracemethods.

Monday, April 7, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Monday, May 12, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch