Veranstaltungen

Diese Woche

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Montag, 14. Oktober
Zeit Referent:in Titel Ort
15:15 - 16:30 Joé Brendel

Abstract
A product torus in S^2 x S^2 is a Lagrangian torus obtained as the product of circles in the factors. The goal of this talk is to give a classification up to symplectomorphisms of such tori and illustrate that interesting things happen in case the symplectic form is non-monotone. Among other applications, we will answer a question about Lagrangian packings posed by Polterovich--Shelukhin. This is partially based on joint work with Joontae Kim.
Symplectic Geometry Seminar
Product tori in S^2 x S^2 and Lagrangian packing
HG G 43
15:30 - 17:00 Dr. Adrian Sauvaget
CNRS and Université de Cergy-Pontoise
Abstract
Many (partial) CohFTs in the moduli spaces of curves can be canonically lifted to the moduli space of spin structures. This leads to a refined study of these cohomology classes according to the sign (or Arf invariant) of the spin structure. We will review open problems and recent advances on the refined study of several partial CohFTs: Witten’s class, Double Ramification cycles, and strata of differentials.
Algebraic Geometry and Moduli Seminar
Several problems about spin classes
HG G 19.1
Dienstag, 15. Oktober
Zeit Referent:in Titel Ort
12:15 - 13:00 Advait Dhingra
ETH Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract
Through the collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, many events happen at a very high frequency. In order to evaluate the data measured at the detectors, statistical tools are needed. These tools, I want to briefly explain (this includes your basic hypothesis testing, likelihood ratio tests, but also what measure do we use to be able to claim a „discovery“ in particle physics and so on..)! This would be the first part of the talk and it’s a very basic/easy introduction. Second part of the talk, I’d like to talk about „Anomaly Detection“ models, what they are, how they work and why they could potentially help us discover new physics and how it’s done.

More information: https://zucmap.ethz.ch/
ZUCCMAP
Studying the building blocks of nature in the Large Hadron Collider
HG G 5
15:15 - 16:15 Dr. Stefano Decio
ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract
Can two minimal surfaces touch each other to infinite order at a point without coinciding in a neighborhood of the point? Intuition from the theory of unique continuation for elliptic PDEs suggests this should not happen. Of course, part of the game here is to specify the notion of minimal surface. In joint work with Camillo Brena we give an answer to an instance of the question above: if an m-dimensional area minimizing integral current has infinite order of contact at a point with an m-dimensional surface with zero mean curvature then the current coincides with the surface in a neighborhood of the point.
Analysis Seminar
A unique continuation result for area minimizing currents
HG G 43
16:30 - 18:15 Dan Isaksen
Wayne State University
Abstract
In part, the goal of homotopy theory is to compute algebraic invariants of topological objects. Of particular interest is the computation of homotopy groups of spheres. Any given result can typically be obtained in several completely distinct ways, using methods that have no visible consistency with each other. It is remarkable that there exists a solution to this highly overdetermined problem. Like many areas of pure mathematics, machine computation can be applied to great effect in this endeavor. I will discuss the history, current state of the art, and future prospects of machine computation in homotopy theory.
Zurich Colloquium in Mathematics
Computation in homotopy theory
KO2 F 150
Mittwoch, 16. Oktober
Zeit Referent:in Titel Ort
13:30 - 14:30 Dr. Katy Loyd
University of Maryland
Abstract
Following Birkhoff's proof of the Pointwise Ergodic Theorem, it is natural to consider whether convergence still holds along various subsequences of the integers. In 2020, Bergelson and Richter showed that in uniquely ergodic systems, pointwise convergence holds along the number theoretic sequence $\Omega(n)$, where $\Omega(n)$ denotes the number of prime factors of $n$, with multiplicities. In this talk, we will see that by removing this assumption, a pointwise ergodic theorem does not hold along $\Omega(n)$. In fact, $\Omega(n)$ satisfies a notion of non-convergence called the strong sweeping out property. We then further classify the strength of this non-convergence behavior by considering weaker notions of averaging. Time permitting, we will introduce a more general criterion for identifying slow growing sequences with the strong sweeping out property (based on joint work with S. Mondal).
Ergodic theory and dynamical systems seminar
Pointwise Ergodic Averages along Sequences of Slow Growth
Y27 H 28
13:30 - 15:30 Dr. Sam Canning
ETH Zürich
HG G 43
15:30 - 16:30 Prof. Dr. Thomas Mettler
UniDistance Suisse
Abstract
I will introduce the notion of a flat extension of a connection on a principal bundle. Roughly speaking, a connection admits a flat extension if it arises as the pull-back of a component of a Maurer–Cartan form. For trivial bundles over closed oriented 3-manifolds, I will relate the existence of certain flat extensions to the vanishing of the Chern–Simons invariant associated to the connection. Joint work with Andreas Cap & Keegan Flood.
Geometry Seminar
Flat extensions of principal connections and the Chern—Simons 3-form
HG G 43
16:30 - 17:30 Prof. Dr. Gigliola Staffilani
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
In this talk we will use the periodic cubic nonlinear Schrödinger equation to present some estimates of the long time dynamics of the energy spectrum, a fundamental object in the study of wave turbulence theory. Going back to Bourgain, one possible way to conduct the analysis is to look at the growth of high Sobolev norms. It turns out that this growth is sensitive to the nature of the space periodicity of the system. I will present a combination of old and very recent results in this direction.
Zurich Colloquium in Applied and Computational Mathematics
A curious phenomenon in wave turbulence theory
HG G 19.2
17:15 - 18:45 Dr. Alejandro Rosales Ortiz
Universität Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract
We begin by introducing the notion of Brownian motion indexed by the Brownian tree. We will then present the main aspects of a theory, developed in two recent works with Armand Riera, that describes the evolution of this tree-indexed process between visits to 0. The theory applies to fairly general continuous Markov processes indexed by Lévy trees. Despite the radically different setting, we will see that our results share strong similarities with the celebrated Itô excursion theory for linear Brownian motion. If time permits, we will also discuss some applications to Brownian geometry.
Seminar on Stochastic Processes
Excursion theory for Brownian motion indexed by the Brownian tree
HG G 43
Donnerstag, 17. Oktober
Zeit Referent:in Titel Ort
16:15 - 17:15 Sophie Schmidhuber
University of Zurich
Abstract
In this talk, we will show how the trajectory of a billiard ball on a billiard table with rational angles can be understood via the straight line flow on a translation surface. We will define the geodesic flow for the moduli space of translation surfaces and provide a simple but elegant proof for Masur's Criterion, which states that if the trajectory of a translation surface under the geodesic flow is recurrent, then the vertical straight line flow on the translation surface is uniquely ergodic.
Geometry Graduate Colloquium
Billiard dynamics and Masur’s Criterion
HG G 19.2
16:15 - 17:15 Maggie Miller
The University of Texas at Austin
Abstract
We show that any two same-genus, oriented, boundary parallel surfaces bounded by a non-split alternating link into the 4-ball are smoothly isotopic fixing boundary. In other words, a non-split alternating link bounds a unique Seifert surface up to isotopy in the 4-ball (and up to genus). This is joint with Seungwon Kim and Jaehoon Yoo.
[K-OS] Knot Online Seminar
Seifert surfaces of alternating knots in 4D
online
17:15 - 18:15 Ziegel Johanna
ETH Zürich
HG F 30
17:15 - 18:30 Prof. Dr. Johanna Ziegel
ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract
Inaugural Lectures
How good is their best guess? Constructing and evaluating predictions
HG F 30
Freitag, 18. Oktober
Zeit Referent:in Titel Ort
14:15 - 15:15 Christopher Birkbeck
University of East Anglia
Abstract
I will discuss some recent joint work on formalising the regular case of Fermat’s Last Theorem in Lean. The regular case of FLT, where the exponent is a prime p that does not divide the class number of the p-th cyclotomic field, has long been known to be much simpler than the full proof, making it a good target for formalisation. In my talk, I will explain what Lean is, why one would want to formalise mathematics, and some of the challenges encountered in this process. No prior knowledge of Lean or formalisation is required.
Number Theory Seminar
Formalising the Regular Case of Fermat’s Last Theorem in Lean
HG G 43
16:00 - 17:30 Prof. Dr. Yefeng Shen
University of Oregon and IHES
Abstract
Quantum spectrum and Gamma structures play key roles in Katzarkov-Kontsevich-Pantev-Yu’s proposal to extract birational invariants from quantum cohomology and Iritani's decomposition theorem for quantum D-modules of blowups. In this talk, we investigate these structures for standard flips in a much simpler setup, by restricting the quantum multiplication to a fiber curve direction. In this setup, we can show that both quantum spectrum and asymptotic behavior can be reduced from the local models, where the small I/J-functions are known explicitly. Using the asymptotic behavior of cohomology-valued Meijer G-functions, we obtain a decomposition of the cohomology of standard flips into asymptotic Gamma classes. This decomposition is compatible with the semi-orthogonal decomposition for standard flips constructed by Bondal-Orlov and Belmans-Fu-Raedschelders. The talk is based on work in progress joint with Mark Shoemaker.
Algebraic Geometry and Moduli Seminar
Quantum spectrum and Gamma structures for flips
HG G 43
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