Math Calendar
Op 25 april organiseert A–Eskwadraat eenreünie voor al haar (oud-)leden. Voor deze editie leek het ons heel leuk als erook docenten rondlopen tijdens de borrel met wie zij mee kunnen praten. Bij deborrel zal onze borrelcommissie zorgen voor een goede voorraad(speciaal)biertjes, wijn en fris en er zullen ook percolators met koffie enthee aanwezig zijn.
Mocht het je leuk lijken om met oud-studenten te praten, dan lijkt het onshartstikke leuk als je komt. Je bent welkom vanaf 14u en het duurt tot 17u. Hetzal plaatsvinden in de hal van het KBG en je kunt je aanmelden met de volgendelink:
https://forms.gle/riwpauWRe7sSF2y78
Er is ook lunch vanaf 13u. Mocht je mee willenlunchen, dan is dat € 5,- vanaf 13 u. Dit kun je aangeven in de formshierboven. Ben je ook oud-lid van A–Eskwadraat en wil je de hele reüniebijwonen, dan kun je je aanmelden met de volgende link:
We consider the acoustic wave and the acousto-gravitational equations of gas giants. The geometry of acoustic waves is modeled by the above mentioned singular Riemannian, "gas giant" metric. We give an overview of the basic properties of the geometry, including properties of geodesics near the boundary, the Hausdorff dimension of the boundary, and the discreteness of the (acoustic) spectrum of the Laplace–Beltrami operator. We present the spectral analysis of this operator and derive the Weyl law. The involved exponents depend on the Hausdorff dimension, which, in the supercritical case (the relevant case for Jupiter and Saturn), is larger than the topological dimension. The Weyl asymptotics determines the blow-up in the supercritical case.
We then consider various inverse problems for simple gas giant planets, proving that the metric is uniquely determined by its boundary distance data and that the geodesic ray transform is injective. We study the determination of a conformal factor of the metric from boundary data (rigidity) using methods involving singular microlocal analysis of the normal operator corresponding to the geodesic ray transform. Moreover, we present the boundary observability of acoustic waves given full and local observations and show how the resulting observability inequality can be turned into a scanning protocol where the observation set moves in time. We conclude with some remarks on inertia-gravity modes on gas planets forming the essential spectrum.
Joint research with Y. Colin de Verdìère, C. Dietze, J. Ilmavirta, A. Kykkänen, R. Mazzeo and E. Trélat.
Title: Quantitative uniform-in-time propagation of chaos for stochastic particle systems interacting through L^p kernels
Abstract: Deriving macroscopic evolution equations from interacting particle systems is a classical problem in mathematical physics. In the mean-field regime, such systems are expected to converge, as the number of particles tends to infinity, to solutions of nonlinear Fokker-Planck equations. One particular challenge is to establish whether this convergence holds uniformly in time, especially for systems with singular interaction kernels.
In this talk, we first briefly review recent results establishing uniform-in-time propagation of chaos. We then introduce the framework of mollified interacting particle systems. Finally, we discuss recent work establishing quantitative uniform-in-time propagation of chaos for interaction kernels in L^p (p>d). The approach is based on a mild formulation of the limiting equation together with semigroup estimates.
Title: TBA
Abstract: TBA
Speaker afternoon (14.15 - 16.00): Edan Lerner (UvA)
Title: Mechanical Criticality in Jamming Transitions
Abstract: Jamming transitions include a broad class of nonequilibrium mechanical phenomena in which material systems transition abruptly between floppy or fluid to rigid or solid phases. In my lecture I will review some of the recent theoretical and computational advancements towards understanding jamming transitions in soft matter systems. Starting from the simplest system of disordered spring networks, I will then describe the mechanics of soft-sphere packings, the rheology of dense non-Brownian suspensions, and finally the stiffening of biopolymer networks subjected to large deformations. I will show how the scaling behavior near the respective jamming transitions of these systems can be obtained by perturbing their respective critical states.