Math Calendar

Friday, March 7, 2025
11:00-16:15
JKH 2-3, 220
Mark Kac seminar in mathematical physics and probability

Speaker: Bernard Nienhuis  (UL)
Title: Explicit conserved quantities of the XXZ quantum chain

 

Abstract: Conservation laws play a very fundamental role in physics. Thermodynamics
and hydrodynamics are founded on conservation principles. For many years I
have worked on integrable or solvable models. Thus I often heard the
statement that solvable models have extensively many conserved quantities.
But I never got to know them for any model. This made me curious to see
them explicitly.

Onno Huygens worked with me as a student on some version of the XXZ chain.
This is a solvable generalization of the one-dimensional Heisenberg model
for ferromagnetism, in which the interaction is anisotropic in spin space.
Out of curiosity I asked Onno to calculate the first 6 or so of its list
of conserved quantities. He succeeded, to get 8 of them. But as to be
expected, they get more complicated as you go down the list. So much so
that it is hard to learn anything from it.

Therefore I asked Onno to find common properties. For a few months he
found every week a few new properties all his 8 conserved quantities had
in common. Until at some day he walked into my office saying "I got them".
He meant that the properties he had found, were enough to define the
series, albeit as an algorithm, not as a closed form expression. Of course
we had no proof that the subsequent terms in the list still had the
propertied Onno had found. With massive computer power he was able to find
number 9 and 10, and they were correctly predicted by his algorithm.

Later, when Onno had moved on to other subjects, I discovered a possiblity
to write the list as a fairly simple closed form expression. This helped
to find a method to prove that they do indeed represent conserved
quantities. Still hard labor, but it worked.

In this talk I will of course introduce the XXZ chain. Then I will
illustrate the above history written by showing examples of the
ingredients of each of the steps in the progress. 

 

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

 

Afternoon session:

 

Speaker 1: Mirmukhsin Makhmudov (UL)

Title: Thermodynamic formalism for long-range potentials

 

Abstract: One-dimensional long-range models have captured considerable attention within the Statistical Mechanics

community, especially since F. Dyson demonstrated the presence of the phase transitions for long-range Ising models

in the low-temperature regime.

In 2017, A. Johansson, A. Öberg, and M. Pollicott studied the Dyson model on the half-line $\mathbb{\Z}$

and established that it also exhibits a phase transition, with a phase diagram similar to that of Dyson's classical model on $\mathbb{Z}$.

 

In this talk, I discuss the relationship between half-line and whole-line (classical) Gibbs states for one-dimensional

systems in a general setup.

Notably, the findings discussed apply to both ferromagnetic and

antiferromagnetic Dyson models. 

Additionally, the talk addresses the problem of the existence and regularity of the principal

eigenfunction of the Perron-Frobenius transfer operator for potentials that fall outside the studied classes in

Thermodynamic Formalism.

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 220, 14.15-15.00

 

 

Speaker 1: Hidde van Wiechem (TU Delft)

Title: A large deviation principle for run-and-tumble particles

 

Abstract: The run-and-tumble particle process is a toy model for active particles, which are particles that use internal energy to move in a preferred direction. We model this as a multi-layer process, where each layer represents an internal state,  to ensure that we are working with a Markov process. In this talk, we will investigate the scaling limits of the empirical measure of this model, with special focus on the large deviations. A main tool here is to introduce a weakly asymmetric version of the model, which produces the correct deviating paths for the large deviation principle. This talk is based on a joint work with Frank Redig and Elena Pulvirenti.

 

 

 

Location and time: JKH 2-3, Room 220, 15.15-16.00

Monday, March 10, 2025
16:15-17:15
Academy Building
Inaugural address
Daniel Dadush
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
13:30-14:30
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Thilo Baumann (University of Luxembourg) on "Categorical absorption for hereditary orders"
Abstract: The idea of categorical absorption of singularities can be used to study the bounded derived category of a flat family of varieties over a smooth curve. We explain how this setup allows the construction of a semiorthogonal decomposition in special situations. Extending this framework to the noncommutative setting, we interpret a hereditary order as a family of finite-dimensional algebras over a curve and construct a semiorthogonal decomposition of the bounded derived category of a hereditary order.
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar
Redshift for Lubin - Tate Theory - Maite Carli

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.

Friday, March 14, 2025
15:00-17:00
HFG 707
Friday Fish
Sven Holtrop - Differentiable Stacks IV
TBA
Monday, March 17, 2025
15:00-17:00
Mezzanine
Teaching staff meeting
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
09:00-13:00
Drift 25
Research Half Day on Mathematical Finance @ Drift 25

 We are pleased to invite you to the Research Half Day on Mathematical Finance, 

taking place on March 18th, 2025, in the morning at Drift 25, Utrecht (Inner City)

 

This event brings together researchers and professionals to discuss cutting-edge topics in financial mathematics.

 

Date: Tuesday, March 18th
Location: Drift 25, Utrecht
Time: 8:30 AM – 1:10 PM

 

Live stream: 

 

Meeting link: https://bit.ly/3WWuZAm

Meeting ID: 342 130 946 741

Toegangscode (Passcode): NR9yK7FZ

 

 

Program Schedule:


8:30 – 9:00 | Coffee & Welcome


9:00 – 9:50 | Laura Spierdijk (University of Twente)
Hedging the Unhedgeable? Pricing CAT Bonds in a Changing Climate

 

9:55 – 10:45 | Yilong Xu (Utrecht University)
A “Green Premium” or a “Brown Discount”: Evidence from Experimental Asset Markets

 

10:45 – 11:15 | Coffee Break

 

11:15 – 12:05 | Jaehyuk Choi (Columbia University)
Efficient Simulation of the SABR Model

 

12:10 – 13:00 | Michael Sanders (Rabobank, Utrecht)
Execution of Financial Products: How Quantitative Analysis Drives Decision-Making in Private Debt and Derivatives13:10 | Workshop Closing


Attendance is open to all, but registration is required. 

Please check the full program and register here: UU Events – Mathematical Finance Research Half Day.

We look forward to seeing you there!

13:30-14:30
DDW 136
AG Seminar
Lara Vicino (U. of Groningen)
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar
Land-Tamme and Purity in Localized K-Theory - Miguel Lourenço Henriques Barata

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 707
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Satoshi Fukuda (Bocconi University) -- Are the Players in an Interactive Belief Model Meta-certain of the Model Itself?
Are the players ''commonly certain'' of an interactive belief model itself? The paper formalizes what it means by: ''a player is certain of her own belief-generating map'' or ''the players are certain of their belief-generating maps (i.e., the model).'' The paper shows: a player is certain of her own belief-generating map if and only if her beliefs are introspective. The players are commonly certain of the model if and only if, for any event which some player i believes at some state, it is common belief at the state that player i believes the event. A negative implication of the latter result is that, under common certainty of the model, mutual and common beliefs coincide with each other. This paper then asks whether the ''meta-common-certainty'' assumption is needed for epistemic characterizations of game-theoretic solution concepts. The paper shows: common belief in rationality leads to actions that survive iterated elimination of strictly dominated actions, as long as each player is logical and certain only of her own strategy and belief-generating map.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
13:30-14:30
Min 207
AG Seminar
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
13:30-15:30
HFG 707
Trace Methods and Computations Seminar
Chromatic Localizing Invariants and Descent - Marco Nervo

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, April 1, 2025
13:30-14:30
Min 014
AG Seminar
Thursday, April 3, 2025
13:00-14:00
Applied mathematics seminar Matteo d'Achille (U Paris Saclay)
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 )
Thursday, April 10, 2025
13:00-14:00
HFG 6.11
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Eric van der Swaluw (RIVM)
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
15:00-18:30
Faculty day 20th anniversary
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
13:00-14:00
HFG 7.07
Applied Mathematics Seminar -- Kateryna Marynets (Delft)
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.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Shizang Li (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
 Lupoian Elvira (University College London)
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
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
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
Zhang Haowen (University of Leiden)
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
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
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
10:00-11:00
HFG 707
AG Seminar
Giuseppe Ancona (IRMA Strasbourg)