Math Calendar

Thursday, April 3, 2025
15:00-17:15
KBG 228
Algebraic Geometry Codes seminar
Talks by Haowen Zhang and Sara Mehidi. See https://sites.google.com/view/laravicino/learning-seminar-on-ag-codes for more details.
Friday, April 4, 2025
10:15-11:15
Utrecht University Hall, Domplein 29, 3512 JE Utrecht, Netherlands
PhD Defense Jaco Ruit
11:00-16:00
JKH 2-3, room 220
Mark Kac seminar in mathematical physics and probability with Francesco Caravenna (U Milano-Bicocca) and Zakhar Kabluchko (U Muenster)

Speaker: Francesco Caravenna  (U Milano-Bicocca)
Title: Noise Sensitivity and Critical 2D Directed Polymers
 

Abstract: We investigate the concept of noise sensitivity for functionals of independent random variables, which refers to the property that a small perturbation in the underlying randomness leads to an asymptotically independent functional. We extend classical noise sensitivity criteria beyond the Boolean setting, deriving quantitative estimates with optimal rates.

As an application, we consider the model of directed polymers in random environments, which describes a random walk interacting with a random medium. In the critical dimension d=2 and under a critical rescaling of the noise strength, the partition function of the model is known to converge to a universal limit, the Stochastic Heat Flow. We show that in this regime, the partition function exhibits noise sensitivity.

(Based on joint work with Anna Donadini)

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 220 at 11-12.45

 

Afternoon session:

 

Speaker: Zakhar Kabluchko (U Muenster)

Title: Beta-type random polytopes and related objects in stochastic geometry

 

Abstract: A random point in a d-dimensional unit ball is said to have a beta distribution if its density is proportional to (1-|x|^2)^{beta}, where beta>-1 is a parameter. For beta=0 we recover the uniform distribution on the unit ball, the limiting case beta -> -1 corresponds to the uniform distribution on the unit sphere, while the case beta -> infty corresponds to the standard Gaussian distribution. Let X_1,..., X_n be independent random points in the d-dimensional unit ball such that X_i follows a beta distribution with parameter beta_i.  Their convex hull [X_1,...,X_n] is called a beta polytope (with parameters n, d, beta_1,...,beta_n). We shall review results on the expected number of k-dimensional faces, expected volume (and other geometric functionals) of beta polytopes and two closely related classes of polytopes called beta' and the beta* polytopes. Several objects in stochastic geometry such as the typical cell of the Poisson-Voronoi tessellation or the zero cell of the homogeneous Poisson hyperplane tessellation  (in Euclidean space or on the sphere) are related to beta' polytopes, while their analogues in the hyperbolic space are related to beta* polytopes. This allows for explicit computations for these objects.

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 220, 14.15-16.00

 

13:00-15:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Bas Wensink - Differentiable Stacks VI
In this talk, we will discuss a few increasingly more difficult examples of differentiable stacks, with the goal of seeing how the abstract theory pops up in concrete cases. One goal is to introduce the notion of orbifold in a way that fits nicely into the theory of differentiable stacks.
Monday, April 7, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
13:30-14:30
Min 014
AG Seminar
Erik Nikolov ( Leibniz Universität Hannover ) on "The Derived Category of the Hilbert Scheme of Three Points"
After introducing Hilbert schemes of points on smooth varieties X, I will motivate the study of their invariants (in terms of invariants of X) in the case of up to three points and in arbitrary dimension. The focus lies especially on a description of the bounded derived category of the Hilbert scheme of three points by means of a semi-orthogonal decomposition, for which an explicit conjecture is presented.
I will report on proven parts of the conjecture, to appear soon in my doctoral thesis. Special attention is drawn to a semi-orthogonal sequence obtained from Fourier-Mukai transforms which embed the derived category of X into the one of its Hilbert scheme of three points. The proof of fully-faithfulness of these Fourier-Mukai transforms leads back to the geometry of Hilbert schemes of points, in particular to normal bundle computations on Grassmannian bundles.
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Thursday, April 10, 2025
13:00-14:00
HFG 6.11
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Eric van der Swaluw (RIVM)
Friday, April 11, 2025
13:00-15:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Nikolas Adaloglou - Which symplectic forms on S2xS2 have Lagrangian Klein bottles?

Using (almost) toric fibrations and their visible Lagrangians we
can construct many novel and interesting examples of Lagrangian
submanifolds of symplectic 4 manifolds.  Naturally, one can ask whether
visible Lagrangians are all the Lagrangians that exist, or, in other
words, how faithful the pictures coming from almost toric fibrations are.

 

I will answer this question for Klein bottles in  (S2xS2,\omega_\lambda),
i.e.  the product of two spheres where the first factor has area 1 and the
other factor has area \lambda. In particular, I will first construct a
visible Lagrangian Klein bottle when \lambda<2.  Then I will show that no
Lagrangian Klein bottles exist otherwise. The key input for obstructing
the existence of the Klein bottles is Luttinger surgery along with
techniques of  (compact) pseudoholomorpic curves and Seiberg-Witten
theory.

This is joint work with J. Evans.
Monday, April 14, 2025
14:15-15:15
Utrecht University Hall, Domplein 29, 3512 JE Utrecht, Netherlands
PhD defense Mar Curco Iranzo
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
13:30-14:30
Min 014
AG Seminar
Sophie Friesen (Leibniz University Hannover)
15:00-18:30
Faculty day 20th anniversary
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
MI Seminar
Dusan Dragutinovic
Thursday, April 17, 2025
13:00-14:00
HFG 6.11
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Kateryna Marynets (Delft) -- Periodic Boundary Value Problems for Fractional Differential Systems

Fractional calculus is a powerful tool in mathematical modeling, that gets more attention of applied mathematicians and natural scientists since the past decades. Dynamical systems involving fractional order derivatives are able to incorporate the so-called ‘memory effects’, and due to the nonlocal nature of fractional differential operators they are usually used in modeling of the flows through porous media (e.g., the groundwater flows), sub- and super-diffusion processes etc. Additionally, a large choice of fractional derivatives and variations in their order gives more flexibility in comparison to the classical integer-order models. This broad range of applications motivates development of analytical and numerical techniques for analysis and approximation of solutions to the fractional initial and boundary values problems (IVPs and BVPs). However, the nonlinear nature of the studied systems and the nonlocality of their fractional operators lead to major challenges in the field. In my talk I will present some recent results on analysis and approximation of solutions of the nonlinear fractional BVPs with periodic boundary constraints. I will show how coupling between the BVP and an equivalent IVP can lead not only to existence and uniqueness results, but also to an explicit expression for their approximate solutions. Finally, I will highlight some behavioral differences between solutions of the periodic BVP of the integer and of the fractional orders.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
13:00-14:00
HFG707
Arithmetic Geometry talk
Adam Morgan (University of Cambridge) - Hasse principle for intersections of two quadrics via Kummer surfaces

Abstract: I will discuss recent work with Skorobogatov establishing the Hasse principle for a broad class of degree 4 del Pezzo surfaces, conditional on finiteness of Tate--Shafarevich groups of abelian surfaces. A corollary of this work is that the Hasse principle holds for smooth complete intersections of two quadrics in P^n for n\geq 5, conditional on the same conjecture. This was previously known by work of Wittenberg assuming both finiteness of Tate--Shafarevich groups of elliptic curves and Schinzel's hypothesis (H).


I will also discuss forthcoming work with Lyczak which, again under the Tate--Shafarevich conjecture, shows that the Brauer--Manin obstruction explains all failures of the Hasse principle for certain degree 4 del Pezzo surfaces about which nothing was known previously.
Thursday, April 24, 2025
13:00-14:00
Alef Sterk (RUG) on "Extremes in dynamical systems
max-stable and max-semistable laws"

Title:
Extremes in dynamical systems: max-stable and max-semistable laws

Abstract:
Extreme value theory for chaotic, deterministic dynamical systems is a rapidly expanding area of research. Given a dynamical system and a real-valued observable defined on its state space, extreme value theory studies the limit probabilistic laws for asymptotically large values attained by the observable along orbits of the system. Under suitable mixing conditions the extreme value laws are the same as those for stochastic processes of i.i.d. random variables.

Max-stable laws typically arise for probability distributions with regularly varying tails. However, in the context of dynamical systems, where the underlying invariant measure can be irregular, max-semistable distributions also have a natural place in studying extremal behaviour. In this talk I will first discuss a family of autoregressive processes with marginal distributions resembling the Cantor function. The resulting extreme value law can be proven to be a max-semistable distribution. Alternatively, we can describe the autoregressive process in terms of an iterated map with an invariant measure. Further examples of extreme value laws in dynamical systems are discussed as well.

Friday, April 25, 2025
13:00-15:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Álvaro del Pino Gómez - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Shizang Li (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Friday, May 2, 2025
13:00-15:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Guillermo Sánchez - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
 Elvira Lupoian (University College London)
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
UGC colloquium
Jared Wunsch (Northwestern University) - TBA
TBA

UGC seminar webpage https://utrechtgeometrycentre.nl/ugc-seminar/
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
MI talk
Yann Guggisberg
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
08:30-17:00
Ruppert B
Vector Bundles on Curves 2025 – Quivers and Sheaves
Thursday, May 15, 2025
08:30-17:00
Bolognalaan 101, room 1.204
Vector Bundles on Curves 2025 – Quivers and Sheaves
Friday, May 16, 2025
13:00-15:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Florian Zeiser - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Lois Faisant (IST Austria)
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Monday, May 26, 2025
13:00-14:30
To be determined
MI Institute meeting
Institute meeting for full professors, associate professors and assistant professors, as well as support staff of the MI.
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Haowen Zhang (University of Leiden)
16:00-17:00
HFG 611
MI talk
Aaron Gootjes-Dreesbach
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Monday, June 16, 2025
12:00-13:00
Bring Your Own Lunch
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Giuseppe Ancona (IRMA Strasbourg)
16:15-17:15
Utrecht University Hall, Domplein 29, 3512 JE Utrecht, Netherlands
PhD defense Dusan Dragutinovic
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Maximilian Schimpf (University Heidelberg)
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Arkadij Bojko (SIMIS and Fudan Uni.)
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
15:00-16:30
HFG707
Category Theory Seminar
TBA - TBA
TBA