Current Seminars
updated 3/31/2004

   
MARCH 31 - APRIL 2, 2004
   
Joint Institute for Advanced Study/Princeton University Complex Geometry Seminar
Topic: Variations of Hodge Structure for Calabi-Yau complete intersections in toric varieties
Presenter: 

John Morgan, Columbia University

Date:  Wednesday, March 31, 2004, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: [ {A,B,C} , {a,b,c}, A, { A-> a|BC|CB, B-> b|AC|CA, C-> c|AB|BA } ]
Presenter:  Doron Zeilberger, Rutgers University
Date:  Wednesday, March 31, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 224
Abstract: See http://www.math.princeton.edu/~bsudakov/doron.html
   
Geometry, Representation, and Moduli Seminar
Topic: A formula for 2-partition Hodge integrals
Presenter: 

C. C. Liu, Harvard University

Date:  Wednesday, March 31, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: Quantum resonances for chaotic systems
Presenter:  Maciej Zworski, University of California, Berkeley
Date:  Wednesday, March 31, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: Quantum resonances describe states which have positive rates of decay. For instance most of chemical reactions proceed via metastable states corresponding to (often many) quantum resonances. In pure maths, the zeros of the Riemann zeta functions are the quantum resonances for the Laplacian on the modular surface.
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: Dense random regular graphs: Methods and challenges
Presenter: 

Benjamin Sudakov, Princeton University

Date:  Thursday, April 1, 2004, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstract: Properties of random $d$-regular graphs were studied extensively starting with late 70's. But until very recently almost all the results were obtained for graphs whose degree $d$ is relatively small compared to the number of vertices $n$. In this talk we survey various results for dense random regular graphs which were obtained in the last few yeas. We will focus on the new approaches which were used and discuss some interesting questions which are still open.
   
Joint Analysis Seminar
Topic: Control theory and high energy eigenfunctions
Presenter:  Maciej Zworski, University of California, Berkeley
Date:  Thursday, April 1, 2004, Time: 3:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Jacob Rasmussen, Princeton University
Date: Thursday, April 1, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Geometric Analysis Seminar *** Please note special time and location
Topic: Ricci flows on 3-manifolds with positive scalar curvature
Presenter:  Zhongmin Qian, Northwestern University
Date:  Friday, April 2, 2004, Time: 1:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Scattering theory on symmetric spaces for N-body Hamiltonians
Presenter:  Andras Vasy, MIT
Date:  Friday, April 2, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
APRIL 5- APRIL 9, 2004
   
Joint Princeton University/Institute for Advanced Study Number Theory Seminar
Topic:

Symplectic Kloosterman sums

Presenter: 

Arpad Toth, Eotvos University, Budapest

Date:  Monday, April 5, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstract: Symplectic Kloosterman sums arise in the Petersson formula for Siegel modular forms of higher genus. We present estimates for these sums, and show how these estimates lead to improved bounds on the Fourier coefficients of Siegel modular forms of genus 2.
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Efficient high-order methods for acoustic and electromagnetic scattering simulations
Presenter:  Fernando Reitich, University of Minnesota
Date:  Monday, April 5, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: In this talk we will present a variety of techniques for the solution of electromagnetic and acoustic scattering problems that are aimed at overcoming the limitations of state-of-the-art scattering solvers. We will begin with a brief review of the techniques most commonly used for the numerical simulation of scattering experiments, highlighting their advantages and shortcomings. In addition to providing a context for the presentation, the review will motivate the continued need for algorithms that can tackle these problems efficiently without sacrificing accuracy and error-controllability. In this connection, we shall first discuss some theoretical considerations that lead to a class of efficient, high-order perturbative methods that are particularly well-suited for rough-surface scattering (e.g. ocean surfaces, diffraction gratings, etc). We shall further explain how these algorithms can be used to resolve the scattering off multi-scale surfaces, leading to consideration of high-frequency problems. With regard to the latter, we shall next present the main ideas behind our recent design of a technique for the solution of the integral-equation formulation of the scattering problem in the high-frequency regime. As we will show, our scheme can deliver error-controllable answers without the need to discretize on the scale of the wavelength of radiation, and it therefore holds significant promise for applicability in a variety configurations (e.g. military vehicles illuminated with centimeter, or even millimeter, waves). Finally, as we shall explain, our high-frequency strategy possesses the additional property that it continuously reduces to a full discretization of the integral equations as the frequency is decreased to a moderate regime. In this regard, and if time permits, we will also present an innovative technique for the efficient solution of the (singular) integral-equations pertaining to volumetric scattering up to these moderate frequencies, that can exhibit arbitrarily large, tunable orders of convergence.
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: Varieties with ample cotangent bundle
Presenter:  Olivier Debarre, Universit. Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg
Date:  Tuesday, April 6, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstract: Among various hyperbolicity properties for compact complex varieties, ampleness of the cotangent bundle is one of the strongest. Varieties with ample cotangent bundles defined over a number field should provide an interesting testing ground for a conjecture of Lang: they are expected to have only finitely many rational points. Although these varieties are expected to be reasonably abundant, few examples are known. I will discuss various constructions and prove in particular that a general complete intersection of dimension at most n/2 in an abelian variety of dimension n has ample cotangent bundle. I will also discuss the possibility that an analogous result might hold for complete intersections in the projective space.
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: "Well integrable" and "completely separable" systems
Presenter: Vadim B. Kuznetsov, Leeds
Date: Tuesday, April 6, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin A06
Abstract:

We will introduce two new notions which appear to be useful when classifying integrable systems from the separation point of view. We provide motivations for doing this as well as give examples. The proposed approach to integrability versus separability will lead to a natural class of integral transforms and special functions, which we call H-class. This can be thought of as a natural generalisation of the Darboux transformations including integral operators.

   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: Sphere packing in R^n through Graph Theory
Presenter:  Michael Krivelevich, Tel Aviv University
Date:  Wednesday, April 7, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 224
Abstract: In this talk I will demonstrate how graph theoretic tools can be utilized to show that for all sufficiently large n there exist sphere packings in R^n of density at least cn/2^n, matching up to a constant factor best known lower bounds for this classical problem of Minkowski. A joint work with Simon Litsyn (Tel Aviv University) and Alexander Vardy (University of California at San Diego).
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter:  Tom Mrowka, MIT and the Institute for Advanced Study
Date:  Wednesday, April 7, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Joint Analysis Seminar
Topic: Integrability, geometry, and singularities of the solutions of a dispersive wave equation
Presenter:  Adrian Constantin, Brown University and the University of Lund
Date:  Thursday, April 8, 2004, Time: 3:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: A recently derived nonlinear partial differential equation models the unidirectional propagation of waves on shallow water and in elastic rods. The uniquely rich structure of the equation is the object of our presentation. The equation is a completely integrable infinite-dimensional Hamiltonian system. It can also be viewed in terms of the geodesic flow on the diffeomorphism group of the circle. Moreover, it possesses waves of permanent form (traveling solitary waves) and waves that "break," meaning that the solution remains bounded but its slope becomes unbounded in finite time. However, its solitary waves are stable and they interact like solitons. There is an associated isospectral problem that governs the soliton behavior.
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar - *** Please note special time and location
Topic: Bounded geodesics and slowly recurrent billiard trajectories
Presenter: 

Dmitry Kleinbock, Brandeis University

Date:  Thursday, April 8, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 601
Abstract: This is a joint work with Barak Weiss. In the moduli space of quadratic differentials on a Riemann surface we construct points with bounded Teichmuller geodesic trajectories. An application to billiards in rational polygons provides a construction of rational billiard analogue of badly approximable numbers.
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: Knots with unknotting number 1
Presenter: Cameron Gordon, University of Texas, Austin
Date: Thursday, April 8, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
APRIL 12- APRIL 16, 2004
   
Joint Princeton University/Institute for Advanced Study Number Theory Seminar
Topic:

TBA

Presenter: 

Zhengyu Mao, Rutgers University - Newark 

Date:  Monday, April 12, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic:

Inequalities of Quantum Information Theory

Presenter: 

Nicholas J. Pippenger, Computer Science, Princeton University

Date:  Monday, April 12, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstact: The recent upsurge of interest in quantum communication and quantum computation has led to a renewed interest in quantum information theory. Specifically, many results concerning quantum communication and quantum computation involve the quantum entropy, a measure of quantum information, introduced by von Neumann in 1927, that generalizes the classical entropy introduced by Shannon in 1948. (The classical entropy is the special case of quantum entropy in which all density matrices are diagonal.) Even for classical information, a complete characterization of the inequalities satisfied by the entropy is available only when the number of variables is at most three, or when the allocation of entropy is symmetric (though some tantalizing results due to Z. Zhang and R. W. Yeung hint at the complexity of the general case. In this talk we shall discuss the extent to which this theory can be extended to the quantum case.
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: Vanishing of Chow (or cohomology) classes on the moduli space of curves
Presenter:  Ravi Vakil, Stanford University
Date:  Tuesday, April 13, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstact: I will discuss a theorem (with T. Graber) that all codimension i tautological classes on the moduli space of curves are trivial away from boundary strata corresponding to curves with at least i-g+1 rational components. (I will define the moduli space and its tautological ring.) In some sense, this is the geometric content behind many vanishing conjectures and theorems on moduli spaces of curves (due to Getzler, Ionel, Faber, Looijenga, Pandharipande, Diaz, and others). I will show how the theorem implies these various results via straightforward graph combinatorics, and how in most cases it extends them. This suggests the potential importance of a strange stratification of the moduli space of curves by number of rational components. If there is time, I will discuss some of the ideas behind the proof, which is an easy consequence of "relative virtual localization" (localization on J. Li's space of relative stable maps). This latter theorem has many other consequences.
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: Approach and return to equilibrium in quantum statistical mechanics
Presenter: Vojkan Jaksic, McGill University
Date: Tuesday, April 13, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin A06
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: Learning in Groups
Presenter:  Robert Calderbank , Princeton University
Date:  Wednesday, April 14, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 224
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: Modulational stability of cellular flows
Presenter:  Alexei Novikov, Penn State University.
Date:  Thursday, April 15, 2004, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstract: We investigate stability of the initial modulational perturbations of stationary solutions to the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations with a time-independent periodic rapidly oscillating forcing. The stationary solutions are cellular flows and they are determined by the stream function $\phi =  \sin x_1/\epsilon \sin x_2/\epsilon + \delta\cos x_1/\epsilon \cos x_2/\epsilon$, $0 \leq \delta \leq 1$.  The perturbations satisfy the modulation equation. For small Reynolds number we determine the stability for the fully nonlinear modulation equation. For any Reynolds number we determine the stability  of the linearized modulation equation.
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar - *** Please note special time and location
Topic: Linear and sub-linear behavior of random walks in random environments on a strip
Presenter: 

Ilya Goldsheid, Queen Mary, University of London

Date:  Thursday, April 15, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 601
Abstract: The remarkable fact that a transitive random walks in random environment does not necessarily grow linearly but may also exhibit sub linear behavior has been known since 1975 (Solomon; Kesten-Kozlov-Spitser). These results were proved for the case of the simplest random walk in dimension one. The attempts to establish similar results for other cases had a limited success. I shall discuss necessary and sufficient conditions leading to a relatively full description of this sort of behavior for a wide range of one- and quasi one-dimensional models.
   
Bill Browder Birthday Topology Seminar Doubleheader - Note special times
Topic: Representations and K-Theory of the Braid Group
Presenter:  Alejandro Adem, University of Wisconsin
Date:  Thursday, April 15, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Topic: Enlargeability and Index Theory
Presenter:  Bernhard Hanke, Universitat Muenchen
Date:  Thursday, April 15, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstact: Let M be a smooth, compact enlargeable spin manifold. Independently of the Baum-Connes conjecture, we prove nonvanishing of a universal index obstruction associated witn M. This implies the result by Gromov and Lawson that M does not admit a metric of positive scalar curvature. As an application of our methods we show that the map --> B\pi_1(M) classifying the universal cover of M sends the fundamental homology class of M to a non trivial class in H_*(B\pi_1(M); Q. This answers a question of D. Burghelea (1983).
   
APRIL 19 - APRIL 23, 2004
   
Joint Princeton University/Institute for Advanced Study Number Theory Seminar
Topic:

TBA

Presenter: 

Harald Helfgott, Yale University

Date:  Monday, April 19, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter:  Mikhail Kapranov, Yale University
Date:  Tuesday, April 20, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: Lower Bounds for Degeneracy Testing
Presenter:  Bernard Chazelle, Princeton University
Date:  Wednesday, April 21, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 224
Abstract: I will discuss how to prove lower bounds in a decision tree model for the problem of testing whether out of n numbers k of them sum up to 0. This is joint work with Nir Ailon.
   
APRIL 26 - APRIL 30, 2004
   
Joint Princeton University/Institute for Advanced Study Number Theory Seminar
Topic:

TBA

Presenter: 

Ben Brubaker, Stanford University

Date:  Monday, April 26, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic:

PlanetLab: Introducing Disruptive Technology into the Internet

Presenter: 

Larry Peterson, Computer Science, Princeton University

Date:  Monday, April 26, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: A new class of geographically distributed network services is emerging, and the most effective way to design, evaluate, and deploy these services is by using an overlay-based testbed. Unlike conventional network testbeds, however, we advocate an approach that supports both researchers that want to develop new services, and clients that want to use them. This dual use, in turn, suggests four design principles that are not widely supported in existing testbeds: services should be able to run continuously and access a slice of the overlay's resources, control over resources should be distributed, overlay management services should be unbundled and run in their own slices, and APIs should be designed to promote application development. This talk describes this high-level vision, and reports the status and plan for the realization of the vision in PlanetLab.
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter:  Jaroslaw Wisniewski, Purdue University and Warsaw
Date:  Tuesday, April 27, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
MAY 3 - MAY 7, 2004
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: The Enriques conjecture; or, How canonical is the canonical bundle?
Presenter:  Joe Harris, Harvard University
Date:  Tuesday, May 4, 2004, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
Abstract: The question we're dealing with is this: Is there any way of associating to each smooth curve C of genus g ---or at least to each C in an open subset of moduli---a line bundle on C, other than by taking powers of the canonical bundle? (The answer, by the way, is no: the canonical bundle is truly canonical.) This question was posed almost a century ago; a bogus proof was given by Franchetta in the '40s (as a result of which the statement is usually called Franchetta's conjecture, and a correct proof was given in the '80s by Harer and Mestrano, based on a topological argument of Harer's. In fact, the statement is immediately implied by a stronger conjecture made by Enriques decades earlier. Enriques claimed (or suggested; it's not always clear) an analogous statement for the Severi variety, namely that the only ways of choosing a line bundle on a general plane curve C of degree d and genus g are combinations of the canonical bundle K_C and the hyperplane bundle O_C(1). In this talk I'll discuss a little of the history of the Enriques conjecture, and variants of it; but the main purpose of the talk will be to give a proof of the conjecture that Deepee Khosla and I found recently.
   
Geometry, Representation, and Moduli Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: 

Alexander Braverman, Brown University

Date:  Wednesday, May 5, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Deforming mappings by Mean Curvature Flow
Presenter:  Mao-Pei Tsui, Columbia University
Date:  Friday, May 7, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
MAY 10 - MAY 14, 2004
   
Joint Princeton University/Institute for Advanced Study Number Theory Seminar
Topic:

TBA

Presenter: 

David J. Burns, King's College, London

Date:  Monday, May 10, 2004, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
MAY 17 - MAY 21, 2004
   
Geometry, Representation, and Moduli Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: 

R. Thomas, Imperial College

Date:  Wednesday, May 19, 2004, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214