2004-2005
| October 12, 2004 | |
| Steven G. Krantz
Washington University, St. Louis |
The Worm Turns |
|
In 1977 Klas Diederich and John Erik Fornaess produced a
stunning example---the worm domain---to provide a counterexample to a
longstanding conjecture about the geometry of domains in complex space. In more
recent years, the worm domain has proved to be important in other contexts,
particularly in the study of the ∂-Neumann
problem. In joint work with Marco Peloso, we study the harmonic analysis of the
worm domain. In particular, we calculate the Bergman kernel and study mapping
properties of the Bergman projection. Understanding this talk requires a central nervous system and some acquaintance with complex analysis. A benign and salubrious attitude towards the speaker can serve as a substitute for any of these attributes. |
|
| October 26, 2004 | |
| Tadeusz Januszkiewicz Ohio State University |
Simplicial Nonpositive Curvature |
Based on joint work with Jacek Świątkowski (Wroclaw University). |
|
| November 9, 2004 | |
| Angela Gibney University of Pennsylvania |
The Moduli Space of Curves of Genus g |
|
Colloquium: The Moduli Space of Curves
of Genus g
November 8th
Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 119: What is a Family of Algebraic Curves of Genus g? |
|
| November 16, 2004 | |
| Marshall Hampton University of Minnesota |
Smale's Sixth Problem: A Solution for the Four-body Problem |
|
In 1998 Steven Smale formulated 18 problems for the 21st century. The 6th
problem is: are the number of relative equilibria in the n-body problem
finite for positive masses? I will explain the motivation and background for
this problem, and then describe a solution in the four-body case (joint work
with Richard Moeckel). The proof exploits the beautiful connection between the
Newton polytopes of a system of polynomial equations and the solutions to those
equations. |
|
| November 23, 2004 | |
| Sun-Yung Alice Chang Princeton University |
Conformal Invariants, Q-curvature and Ricci Tensor |
|
Colloquium: Conformal Invariants, Q-curvature and Ricci Tensor
November 22nd
Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 119: How can we tell it is the sphere? |
|
| November 30, 2004 | |
| Boris Solomyak University of Washington |
Substitution Dynamical Systems |
| A substitution dynamical system is given by the shift map on a space of infinite
sequences produced by simple rules. The classical example of such a system arises from the Morse sequence, obtained by iterating the substitution 0 -> 01, 1 -> 10. Marston Morse introduced it in 1921 to show the existence of recurrent nonperiodic geodesics on surfaces of negative curvature. (The same sequence was studied by Prouhet in 1851 and by Thue in 1906, so it is now sometimes called the Prouhet-Thue-Morse sequence.) The interest in such systems is that they are (usually) nonperiodic, but are highly "ordered," e.g. recurrent in a very strong quantitative sense. I will sketch some of the history of these systems, applications in other fields (number theory, Schrödinger operators, tilings and quasicrystals), and describe some open problems. Click
here to view slides from this talk. |
|
| February 15, 2005 | |
| Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat Faculte des Sciences de Paris and l'Universite Pierre et Marie Curie |
From the Big Bang to Future Complete Cosmologies |
| Colloquium:
From the Big Bang to Future Complete Cosmologies The Einstein equations are a system of second order partial differential equations which are essentially equivalent, up to constraints to be satisfied by Cauchy initial data, to a system of quasilinear wave equations. The local Cauchy problem has been solved long ago. For the global problem there are only partial results. We consider in this talk the so called cosmological case, that is the case of a spacetime with space a compact 3-manifold. The only nonsingular spacetime product of such space by a line satisfying the Einstein equations is then flat, i.e. of zero Riemannian curvature. All other models have a singularity, say in the past. Their completeness in the future is a question under active study. We will review briefly recent results in this area, in particular those obtained for spacetimes admitting a spatial isometry group in collaboration with J. Isenberg and V. Moncrief.
February 14th Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 134:
General Relativity, Overview and Prospects |
|
| February 22, 2005 | |
| Adrian Lewis Cornell University |
Stable Polynomials, Nonsmooth Optimization, and Belgian Chocolate |
| A polynomial is
"stable" if all its roots lie in the left half-plane. A fundamental and
difficult problem in control theory is to find a stable polynomial from some
given family. In 1994, V. Blondel offered a prize of a kilogram of chocolate
for solving a particular instance. A new nonsmooth optimization algorithm
based on "gradient sampling" leads to a strikingly simple solution to
Blondel's problem. I will outline this algorithm, discuss its properties,
and describe how the variational structure of the set of stable polynomials
results in the form of the optimal solution we find. Joint work with J. Burke, D. Henrion, S. Henderson, M. Overton. |
|
| March 8, 2005 | |
| Eric Babson University of Washington |
Enumerative Geometry |
| Roughly speaking,
enumerative geometry consists of those algebro-geometric problems in which
one tries to count the number of a certain class of geometric objects
satisfying given conditions. For example, given 5 points in the plane, no
three of which are collinear, how many conic sections pass through all of
them? (Answer: 1.) In order for such a problem to have a chance of having a
well-defined solution, certain conditions must be met. One particularly
simple setting is that of the Schubert calculus in which the objects being
counted are subspaces. |
|
| April 5, 2005 | |
| Ulrike Tillmann Oxford University |
Strings and Moduli Spaces of Riemann Surfaces--A Topologist's View |
| Colloquium:
Strings and Moduli Spaces of Riemann Surfaces--A Topologist's View The moduli spaces of Riemann surfaces are fundamental mathematical objects which are central to complex analysis, algebraic geometry and topology. The systematic study of their cohomology was initiated by Mumford in the early 1980s. Much recent interest in the subject has been motivated by mathematical physics, in particular string theory. I will give an overview and in particular explain how a homotopy theoretic approach led to the recent proof by Madsen and Weiss of Mumford's conjecture on the rational stable cohomology of moduli space (obtained by letting the genus tend to infinity).
April 4th Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 119:
Groups, Categories, and Classifying Spaces
In his thesis in 1968, Graeme Segal introduced the
notion of a classifying space for categories which has now become a basic
construction in topology. In part as a preparation for the colloquium
talk I plan to discuss how extra structure on the category leads to extra
structure on the associated classifying space, and how much the classifying
space remembers of the category. |
|
| April 19, 2005 | |
| Gunther Uhlmann University of Washington |
Inside-Out: Inverse Problems |
| Inverse problems arise
in practical situations such as medical imaging, geophysical exploration,
and non-destructive evaluation where measurements made on the exterior of a
body are used to determine properties of the inaccessible interior. The
purpose of this lecture is to present some of the ideas involved in the
considerable mathematical progress made in understanding these problems
during the last twenty five years. Computed Tomography (CT) is probably the most familiar inverse problem. In this imaging method the attenuation in intensity of an X-ray beam is measured, and the information from many X-rays from different sources is assembled and analyzed to recover the density of internal tissues. Mathematically it is a problem of recovering a function from the set of its line integrals (or the set of its plane integrals). Radon found in the early part of the 20th century a formula to recover a function from this information. Although this formula was found on purely theoretical considerations its numerical implementation is used in most algorithms for CT scans. In this lecture I will also describe two other inverse problems. One is Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT). In this inverse method one attempts to determine the electrical conductivity of a medium by making voltage and current measurements at the boundary. One potential application is early breast cancer detection. The problem, in mathematical terms, is to determine the coefficient of a partial differential equation by measuring the boundary values of the solutions of the equation and the normal derivatives at the boundary of the solutions. The second problem is travel time tomography. In this inverse problem one attempts to determine the sound speed of a medium by measuring at the boundary the first arrivals times of waves going through the medium. The motivation of this problem came originally from Geophysics: Can one determine the inner structure of the Earth by measuring the travel times of seismic waves? Mathematically this problem can be restated as the question of determining a Riemannian metric of a Riemannian manifold with boundary by knowing the lengths of geodesics connecting points on the boundary. I will also describe a surprising connection between travel time tomography and EIT. I will assume during this lecture no previous knowledge of partial differential equations or differential geometry. |
|
| April 26, 2005 | |
| Marianna Csörnyei University College in London |
On the Visibility of Invisible Sets |
| Colloquium:
On the Visibility of Invisible Sets A planar set A is called invisible, if its orthogonal projection is of measure 0 in almost every direction; A is visible, if it is not invisible. We say that A is invisible from a point, if almost all lines through that point do not hit the set. P. Mattila raised the poetic question whether the set of points from which an invisible set is visible is invisible. R.O. Davies proved in 1952 that an arbitrary measurable planar set A can be covered by lines in such a way that the set of all points covered by these lines has the same Lebesgue measure as A. We prove that the same result holds not only for Lebesgue measure, but for every reasonable measure on the plane. We show how this result may be used to answer the question of Mattila, and we characterise the sets of the plane from which an invisible set is visible. We also answer some other problems about lines intersecting sets.
April 25th Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 119:
Whitney's Extension Theorem and Related Problems |
|
| May 10, 2005 | |
| Krzysztof Burdzy University of Washington |
Is Probability a Field of Mathematics? |
The talk will consist of two parts.
The first one (hopefully short) will deal
with the philosophical question of what makes
a field a part of mathematics (Hint: a collection
of rigorous definitions, theorems and proofs
is not necessarily a field of mathematics).
In the second part I will argue (surprise,
surprise) that probability is indeed a field
of mathematics. The concept of "probability"
is now an abstract mathematical notion,
often unrelated to any real world randomness.
I will present a number of examples of purely
technical uses of probability measures
in mathematics. |
|
| May 17, 2005 | |
| Alejandro Adem University of British Columbia |
Periodic Complexes and Group Actions |
A classical problem in topology is that of characterizing those finite
groups that act fixed-point freely on a sphere. In this talk we will review
these results and describe recent work towards extending this to (i) a
product of two spheres and (ii) actions of discrete groups. The methods we
use are a combination of techniques in topology and group theory. |
|
| May 31, 2005 | |
| Margaret Cheney Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute |
Synthetic Aperture Radar |
| Colloquium:
Synthetic Aperture Radar In Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imaging, a plane or satellite carrying an antenna flies along a (usually straight) flight path. The antenna emits pulses of electromagnetic radiation; this radiation scatters off the terrain and is received back at the same antenna. These signals are used to produce an image of the terrain. One of the key technologies involved in SAR imaging is mathematics. This talk will show some SAR images and explain the basic mathematics behind the formation of high-resolution images.
June 1st Grad Student Seminar, 4pm, THO 119:
Imaging and Inverse Problems |
|
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