Tidligere arrangementer - Side 96
ESOP seminar. Johannes Urpelainen is Associate Professor at Columbia University. He will present his paper "Electoral Backlash or Positive Reinforcement? Wind Power and Congressional Elections in the United States", written jointly with Alice Tianbo Zhang.
Morten Bo Madsen, Associate Professor, Astrophysics and Planetary Science, Niels Bohr Institute
The Bass-Quillen conjecture states that every vector bundle over A^n_R is
extended from Spec(R) for a regular noetherian ring R. In 1981, Lindel
proved that this conjecture has an affirmative solution when R is
essentially of finite type over a field. We will discuss an equivariant
version of this conjecture for the action of a reductive group. When R =
C, this is called the equivariant Serre problem and has been studied by
authors like Knop, Kraft-Schwarz, Masuda-Moser-Jauslin-Petrie. In this
talk, we will be interested in the case when R is a more general regular
ring. This is based on joint work with Amalendu Krishna
Michal Michalowski, Royal Observatory Edinburgh, School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Edinburgh
Enrico Fermi and the birth of modern nonlinear physics
In the early fifties in Los Alamos E. Fermi in collaboration with J. Pasta and S. Ulam investigated a one dimensional chain of equal masses connected by a weakly nonlinear spring. The key question was related to the understanding of the phenomenon of conduction in solids; in particular they wanted to estimate the time needed to reach a statistical equilibrium state characterized by the equipartition of energy among the Fourier modes. They approached the problem numerically using the MANIAC I computer; however, the system did not thermailize and they observed a recurrence to the initial state (this is known as the FPU-recurrence). This unexpected result has led to the development of the modern nonlinear physics (discovery of solitons and integrability). In this seminar, I will give an historical overview of the subject and present the different approaches that have been proposed in the last 60 years for explaining this paradox. Very recent results on the estimation of the time scale and on the explanation of the mechanism of equipartition will also be discussed.
In Part 2 we will delve into the worlds of derived and spectral algebraic
geometry. After reviewing some basic notions we will explain how motivic
homotopy theory can be extended to these settings. As far as time permits
we will then discuss applications to virtual fundamental classes, as well
as a new cohomology theory for commutative ring spectra, a brave new
analogue of Weibel's KH
In Part 2 we will delve into the worlds of derived and spectral algebraic
geometry. After reviewing some basic notions we will explain how motivic
homotopy theory can be extended to these settings. As far as time permits
we will then discuss applications to virtual fundamental classes, as well
as a new cohomology theory for commutative ring spectra, a brave new
analogue of Weibel's KH
Dagmar Frisch, Marie Sk?odowska-Curie Research Fellow, University of Birmingham
We consider extensions of Morel-Voevodsky's motivic homotopy theory to the
settings of derived and spectral algebraic geometry. Part I will be a
review of the language of infinity-categories and the setup of
Morel-Voevodsky homotopy theory in this language. As an example we will
sketch an infinity-categorical proof of the representability of Weibel's
homotopy invariant K-theory in the motivic homotopy category.
ESOP seminar. Francisco Buera is senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. He will present a paper entitled "The Global Diffusion of Ideas", written jointly with Ezra Oberfield.
Numerical methods for stochastic conservation laws
Friday seminar by Marcin Piwczyński from Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland
Nick Kaiser, IfA, Hawai University
Experimental investigation of linear stability mechanisms in stratified gas-liquid pipe flow
The evolution of interfacial waves on a stratified air water pipe flow is investigated experimentally. An oscillating plate introduced controlled perturbations at the inlet of the pipe. High speed cameras captured the evolution of these perturbations along the pipe by means of a phase-locked shadowgraphy technique. Thereby, it was possible to measure the temporal and the spatial evolution of the disturbances introduced in the flow. Particle image velocimetry was performed further downstream in order to evaluate changes in the base flow.
A relatively large data bank has been gathered with varying air and water flow rates as well as varying amplitudes and frequencies of the inlet perturbations. Some preliminary results contain a qualitative assessment of linear vs. non-linear regimes and momentum transfer into the water layer.
Professor Eric Priest, St Andrews University, Scotland:
Our Dynamic Sun
Yuan Wang (Utah), gives the Seminar in Algebra and Algebraic Geometry:
"On the characterization of abelian varieties for log pairs in zero and positive characteristic"
Eric Priest, University of St.Andrews
H?vard Kvamme (UiO, Dept. of mathematics) will give a seminar in the lunch area, 8th floor Niels Henrik Abels hus at 14:15.
We will discuss the motivic May spectral sequence and demonstrate how to use it to identify Massey products in the motivic Adams spectral sequence. We will then investigate what is known about the motivic homotopy groups of the eta-local sphere over the complex numbers and discuss how these calculations may work over other base fields.
ESOP seminar. Andrea Mattozzi is Professor of Microeconomics at the European University Institute. He will present the paper "Public versus Secret Voting in Committees", written jointly with Marcos Y. Nakaguma.
The project partners came together for a workshop on Globalization, Institutions and the Welfare State at the UCL Department of Economics, London.
Jack Carlyle, ITA, Postdoc
Francesco Galuppi (UiO/Ferrara) gives the algebraic geometry seminar:
"Identifiability of polynomials and Cremona transformations."
Genetic and environmental pathways to substance use and misuse.
Alfredo Galindo-Uribarri, Oak Ridge National Laboratory / University of Tennessee, Knoxville.