SEMINARS
Updated: 10-4-2006
   
OCTOBER 2006
   
Special Seminar
Topic: Sato-Tate Conjecture
Presenter: Andrew Wiles, Princeton University
Date:  Wednesday, October 4, 2006, Time: 1:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
Abstract:

We plan to discuss the mathematics behind the recent proof of the Sato-Tate conjecture for non-integral j-invariants

   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: Cycles in graphs
Presenter: Jacques Verstraete, McGill University
Date:  Wednesday, October 4, 2006, Time: 2:15 p.m., Location: Fine 224
Abstract:

http://www.math.princeton.edu/~bsudakov/verstraete2006-fall.pdf

   
Analysis Seminar ***Please note special date and time and location
Topic: Geometrization of Probability
Presenter: Vitali Milman, Tel-Aviv University
Date:  Wednesday, October 4, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Jadwin 111
Abstract: It was recently observed that asymptotic theory of high dimensional convexity is naturally extended to the much larger category of log-concave measures. The main goal of the talk is to show how some important geometric inequalities are interpreted and extended for log-concave measures. Also, some typical probabilistic results are interpreted and proved in a geometric framework. Moreover, this extension of the geometric approach to the log-concave category is needed to solve some central problems of purely geometric nature.
   
Geometry, Representation Theory, and Moduli Seminar
Topic: Weighted Gromov-Witten theory
Presenter: V. Alexeev, Georgia
Date:  Wednesday, October 4, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract: I will describe moduli spaces of weighted stable maps (C,P1...Pn)->V, a version in which to each point P_i one assigns a weight between zero and one; I will then describe the corresponding weighted Gromov-Witten and descendent invariants (based on a joint work with Michael Guy). Time permitting, I will also explain some of the "higher-dimensional" theory, with stable curves replaced by higher-dimensional varieties.
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: Nonlinear problems involving fractional diffusion
Presenter: Luis Caffarelli, University of Texas at Austin
Date:  Wednesday, October 4, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: On mixing for flows over interval exchange maps
Presenter: Corinna Ulcigrai, Princeton University
Date:  Thursday, October 5, 2006, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine 401
Abstract: We consider suspension flows over interval exchange transformations (IETs), under a roof function with logarithmic singularities. As a motivation, such flows arise as minimal components of flows on surfaces given by multi-valued Hamiltonians. We prove that if the roof function has an asymmetric logarithmic singularity, the suspension flow is mixing for a full measure set of IETs. This generalizes a result by Khanin and Sinai for flows over rotations. A key ingredient in the proof is the study of the asymptotic behaviour of the Birkhoff sums of a non integrable function using Rauzy-Veech renormalization for IETs. Time permitting, we will also talk about some work in progress in the case of a symmetric singularity.
   
Joint Institute for Advanced Study and Princeton University Number Theory Seminar
Topic: Level-raising for GSp(4)
Presenter: Claus Sorensen, Princeton University
Date:  Thursday, October 5, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 214
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: Stable decompositions of complements of complex coordinate subspace arrangements and generalized moment angle complexes
Presenter: Tony Bahri, Rider University
Date:  Thursday, October 5, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
Abstract: A report of joint work with Martin Bendersky, Fred Cohen and Sam Gitler. We investigate a splitting, after one suspension, of a generalized moment angle complex into pieces related directly to the underlying simplicial complex defining it. In the particular case of the complements of complex coordinate subspace arrangements, our result implies a well known homology result of Goresky and MacPherson.
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: A young spectral invariant on surfaces, with some old rich  relatives
Presenter: Kate Okikiolu, University of Pennsylvania and USCD
Date:  Friday, October 6, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Analysis Seminar
Topic: Blow up of the critical norm for some L^2 super critical nonlinear Schrodinger equations
Presenter: Pierre Raphael, Princeton University
Date:  Monday, October 9, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 110
Abstract: Let the focusing (NLS) $iu_t+\Delta u+u|u|^{2}=0$ in dimension $N\geq 1$ with initial data in the energy space $H1$. For $N=1$, the problem is $L2$ subcritical and all $H1$ solutions are global. On the contrary, in dimensions $N=2,3$, there exist finite time blow up solutions but the understanding of the blow up dynamics is still very poor. In dimension $N=2$, the equation is $L2$ critical and thus the critical -that is scaling invariant- $L2$ norm is bounded because it is conserved. In dimension $N=3$, the problem is $H^{1/2}$ critical and numerics suggest that this norm should blow up if the solution blows up in finite time. We prove this result for radially symmetric initial data together with a lower bound $|u(t)|_{H^{1/2}}\geq |log(T-t)|^{\alpha}$. This is joint work with Frank Merle.
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Vincent Van Gogh and Imitators in Greyscale: An Experiment in Cross-Disciplinary Stimulation
Presenter: C. Richard Johnson, Jr., Electrical and Computer Engineering, Cornell University
Date:  Monday, October 9, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract: This seminar describes a recently initiated project intended to accelerate the interaction of art historians and image processors in artist identification. The collection of digital images of artwork has been underway for over twenty years. Subsequently, in the last ten years image processors have initiated projects to process digitized images of paintings and drawings to assist art historians in artist identification. A key issue in the advance of this emerging technology, which is poised to expand rapidly over the next ten years, is bridging the gap between the two cultures of image processor system developers and art historian users. Four teams presently creating image processing schemes to assist the art historian in artist identification have agreed to prepare a daylong program for art historians to introduce them to the potential of this technology. The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam and the Kroller-Muller Museum in Otterloo have agreed to provide these four teams access to a common database of digitized paintings by Vincent Van Gogh and his imitators. The Van Gogh Museum plans to host a workshop on May 18, 2007, to be attended by art historians to whom the four teams will make presentations on brushstroke analysis in assistance of artist identification. The genesis of this pioneering experiment in cross-disciplinary stimulation raises a number of interesting issues about research between one field suffused with mathematics, models, and algorithms and another where such intellectual tools are practically absent and conceivably considered intellectually inappropriate.
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: Self-avoiding loop correlations and loop erasure
Presenter: David Brydges, Univ of British Columbia, IAS
Date:  Tuesday, October 10, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin 343
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic:

Tikhonov regularisation for functional minimum distance estimators

Presenter: Olivier Scaillet, University of Geneva
Date:  Tuesday, October 10, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
Abstract: We study the asymptotic properties of a Tikhonov regularised (TiR) estimator of a functional parameter based on a minimum distance principle for nonparametric conditional moment restrictions. The estimator is computationally tractable and even takes a closed form in the linear case. We derive its asymptotic Mean Integrated Squared Error (MISE), its rate of convergence and its pointwise asymptotic normality under a regularisation para- meter depending on the sample size. The optimal value of the regularisation parameter is characterised. We illustrate our theoretical findings and the small sample properties with simulation results for two numerical examples. We also discuss two data driven selection procedures of the regularisation parameter via a spectral representation and a subsampling approximation of the MISE. Finally, we provide an empirical application to nonparametric estimation of an Engel curve.
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: The rank of random graphs
Presenter: Kevin Costello, Rutgers University
Date:  Wednesday, October 11, 2006, Time: 2:15 p.m., Location: Fine 224
Abstract: http://www.math.princeton.edu/~bsudakov/costello2006-fall.pdf
   
Geometry, Representation Theory, and Moduli Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: I. Smith, Cambridge
Date:  Wednesday, October 11, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Klaus Schmidt, University of Vienna / Schrodinger Institute
Date:  Wednesday, October 11, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: Spectral localization in the hierarchical Anderson model
Presenter: Eugene Kritchevski, McGill University, Montreal
Date:  Thursday, October 12, 2006, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine 401
Abstract: The hierarchical Anderson model is a discrete random self-adjoint operator H=L+cV acting on l2(X), where X is a countable set, L is a hierarchical Laplacian, V is a random potential given by (Vf)(x)=v_x f(x) with v_x i.i.d. random variables, and c>0 is a coupling constant. S. Molchanov has proven that the spectrum of H is pure point with probability one, when the random variables v_x have a Cauchy distribution. In this talk, I will review the basic properties of the model and I will present two localization theorems extending Molchanov's result. Theorem 1: if the spectral dimension of the model is less or equal than 4, then, for any continuous distribution of v_x, the spectrum of H is pure point with probability one. Theorem 2: for a dense set of distributions of v_x, H has pure point spectrum with probability one, in any spectral dimension.
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Concentration phenomena
Presenter: Andrea Malchiodi, SISSA, Trieste
Date:  Friday, October 13, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
Abstract: We consider some classes of singularly perturbed elliptic equations, arising from the study of the NLS or from reaction- diffusion systems. We characterize the asymptotic behavior of some solutions in terms of stationarity properties of the limit sets. Resonance phenomena occur in general, and the analysis presents analogies to the study of collapsing CMC surfaces.
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: One sketch for all: a sublinear approximation scheme for heavy hitters
Presenter: Anna Gilbert, Mathematics, University of Michigan
Date:  Monday, October 16, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract:

The heavy hitters problem elicits a list of the m largest-magnitude components in a signal of length d. Although this problem is easy when the signal is presented explicitly, it becomes much more challenging in the setting of streaming data, where the signal is presented implicitly as a sequence of additive updates. One approach maintains a small sketch of the data that can be used to approximate the heavy hitters quickly. In previous work, this sketch is essentially a random linear projection of the data that fails with small probability for each signal. It is often desirable that the sketch succeed simultaneously for ALL signals from a given class, a requirement that may be called uniform heavy hitters. It arises, for example, when the signal is queried a large number of times or when the signal updates are stochastically dependent.

This talk describes a random linear sketch for uniform heavy hitters that succeeds with high probability. The recovery algorithm produces a list of heavy hitters that approximates the input signal with an l2 error that is optimal, except for an additive term that depends on the optimal l1 error and a controllable parameter e. The recovery algorithm requires space m*poly(log(d)/e) and time m2*poly(log(d)/e) to produce the list of heavy hitters. Up to logarithmic factors, the performance of this algorithm is the best possible with respect to several resources.

Joint work with Martin Strauss, Joel Tropp, and Roman Vershynin.

   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Sándor Kovács, University of Washington
Date:  Tuesday, October 17, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: Ising models with long range competing interactions: striped nature of the ground states
Presenter: Alessandro Giuliani, Princeton University
Date:  Tuesday, October 17, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin 343
Abstract: I will consider a d-dimensional Ising model with nearest neighbor ferromagnetic interaction and a long range antiferromagnetic interaction, decaying as the distance to the power -(d+1). In 1D I will show that the ground state is periodic, consisting of ferromagnetic blocks of alternating magnetization. I will then discuss partial results for the multidimensional case, for which a similar phenomenon of spontaneous stripe formation in the ground state has been conjectured. The talk is based on joint work with Joel Lebowitz and Elliott Lieb.
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Jonathan Eckstein, Rutgers University
Date:  Wednesday, October 18, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Conservation laws for conformally invariant Lagrangian and  Schroedinger systems
Presenter: Tristan Riviere, ETHZ, Zurich
Date:  Friday, October 20, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Solving Nasty Optimization Problems in Science and Engineering
Presenter: Margaret Wright, Computer Science Department, CIMS, New York University
Date:  Monday, October 23, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract:

Many important optimization problems in science and engineering involve functions that can fairly be described as "nasty", which can mean any or all of wildly nonlinear, nonsmooth, noisy, and defined through complex black-box simulation or error-prone experimental data. Because it is often impossible or impractical to calculate derivatives of these functions, non-derivative methods are the only feasible choice. These methods are in the midst of a renaissance involving research on their theoretical and computational properties, as well as investigation of which methods are best suited for which applications. This talk will include examples of challenging problems along with the speaker's assessment of the state of the art in non-derivative optimization methods.

   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: James McKernan, University of California, Santa Barbara
Date:  Tuesday, October 24, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Robert Smith, University of Michigan
Date:  Tuesday, October 24, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: Packing Hamilton cycles in random graphs
Presenter: Michael Krivelevich, Tel Aviv University
Date:  Wednesday, October 25, 2006, Time: 2:15 p.m., Location: Fine 224
Abstract: See http://www.math.princeton.edu/~sudakov/krivelevich2006-fall.pdf
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Gaoyong Zhang, Polytechnic University, NY
Date:  Friday, October 27, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Benjamin Schlein, UC Davis
Date:  Monday, October 30, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 110
   
NOVEMBER 2006
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Information Theory and Probability Estimation: From Shannon to Shakespeare via Laplace, Good, Turing, Hardy, Ramanujan, and Fisher
Presenter: Alon Orlitsky, ECE and CSE, University of California, San Diego
Date:  Monday, November 6, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract:

Standard information-theoretic results show that data over small, typically binary, alphabets can be compressed to Shannon's entropy limit. Yet most practical sources, such as text, audio, or video, have essentially infinite support. Compressing such sources requires estimating probabilities of unlikely, even unseen, events, a problem considered by Laplace. Of existing estimators, an ingenious if cryptic one derived by Good and Turing while deciphering the Enigma code works best yet not optimally. Hardy and Ramanujan's celebrated results on the number of integer partitions yield an asymptotically optimal estimator that compresses arbitrary-alphabet data patterns to their entropy. The same approach generalizes Fisher's seminal work estimating the number of butterfly species and its extension authenticating a poem purportedly written by The Bard. The talk covers these topics and is self contained.

Joint work with Prasad Santhanam, Krishna Viswanathan, and Junan Zhang


   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Aaron Bertram, University of Utah
Date:  Tuesday, November 7, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Dilip Madan, University of Maryland
Date:  Tuesday, November 7, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: Irrational triangular billiards
Presenter: Richard Schwartz, Brown University
Date:  Wednesday, November 8, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
Abstract: It is an old and open problem whether or not every triangular shaped billiard table has a periodic billiard path. The answer is known to be yes for acute, right, and rational triangles but unknown in the obtuse irrational case. Over several years, Pat Hooper and I have developed a graphical user interface, called McBilliards, with a view towards resolving the triangular billiards problem. The huge experimental output from the progran illustrates the extreme and previously unexpected complexities of the problem. In my talk I will survey the experimental evidence from McBilliards and also explain some of our rigorous results which were inspired by the experiments.
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Lei Ni, UCSD
Date:  Friday, November 10, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Nicolas Burq, Paris 11
Date:  Monday, November 13, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 110
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Denoising Color Images
Presenter: Yang Wang, Mathematics, Georgia Institute of Technology
Date:  Monday, November 13, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
Abstract:

Natural color images captured by digital cameras often exhibit noticeable noise, particularly when the pictures are taken under low lighting or artificial lighting conditions. Traditional denoising techniques, which are often tested for removing artificial noise in monochromatic images, often do not work well for noisy color images.

In this talk, we present an overview of some of the traditional methods for denoising. We discuss a new strategy, which we call the cross-channel principle, that can be applied for very effective denoising of color images. In particular we show how this principle can be applied to the total variation denoising scheme and an ENO type denoising scheme.


   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: Toric vector bundles and the resolution property
Presenter: Sam Payne, Stanford University; Clay Institute
Date:  Tuesday, November 14, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
Abstract: Is every coherent sheaf on an algebraic variety the quotient of a locally free sheaf of finite rank? I will discuss an investigation of this question via equivariant vector bundles on toric varieties, and will give examples of complete (singular, nonprojective) toric threefolds with no nontrivial equivariant vector bundles of rank less than or equal to 3. It is not known whether these varieties have any nontrivial vector bundles at all.
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: Many Bosons
Presenter: E. Trubowitz, ETH, Zurich
Date:  Tuesday, November 14, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin 343
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Mircea Mustaţă, University of Michigan; IAS
Date:  Wednesday, November 15, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: William Jaco, IAS and Oklahoma State University
Date:  Thursday, November 16, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Young-Heon Kim, University of Toronto
Date:  Friday, November 17, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Alexander Kiselev, University of Wisconsin
Date:  Monday, November 20, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 110
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Massimo Fornasier, PACM, Princeton University
Date:  Monday, November 20, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Mircea Mustaţă, University of Michigan; IAS
Date:  Tuesday, November 21, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
   
Mathematical Physics Seminar
Topic: Mean-Field and Classical Limit of Many-body Schroedinger Dynamics for Bosons
Presenter: Sandro Graffi, Univ. of Bologna
Date:  Tuesday, November 21, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Jadwin 343
Abstract: A new proof of the convergence of the N-particle Schroedinger dynamics for bosons towards the dynamics generated by the Hartree equation in the mean-field limit. For a restricted class of two-body interactions, we obtain convergence estimates uniform in h- bar, up to an exponentially small remainder. For h-bar = 0, the classical dynamics in the mean-field limit is given by the Vlasov equation. (Joint work with J.Froehlich and S.Schwarz.)
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Inverse scattering in nuclear magnetic resonance
Presenter: Charles Epstein, Mathematics, University of Pennsylvania
Date:  Monday, November 27, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 214
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Marcel Rindisbacher, University of Toronto
Date:  Tuesday, November 28, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
   
DECEMBER 2006
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Mario Bonk, University of Michigan
Date:  Friday, December 1, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
PACM Colloquium - Distinguished Lecture Series
Topic: Genomic Information: Biology and Medicine in the 21st Century
Presenter: Eric S. Lander, Broad Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Date:  Friday, December 1, 2006, Time: 8:00 p.m., Location:A02 McDonnell Hall
Abstract: The Human Genome Project was just an early step in a decades-long scientific program aimed at achieving a systematic and comprehensive view of biology and medicine. This program involves deep collaboration among biologists, chemists, physicians, engineers and -- importantly -- mathematicians and computer scientists. The lecture will describe current projects in genomic medicine, including comparative genomics, human genetics, cancer genetics and chemical biology. Along the way, it will highlight analytical issues that arise from the massive amounts of genomic information that are rapidly becoming available.
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Günter Harder, Max Planck Institut für Mathematik; IAS
Date:  Tuesday, December 5, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322
   
Operations Research and Financial Engineering Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Gordan Zitkovic, University of Texas
Date:  Tuesday, December 5, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: E-219, E-Quad
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Tom Bohman, Carnegie Mellon University
Date:  Wednesday, December 6, 2006, Time: 2:15 p.m., Location: Fine 224
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Yakov Sinai, Princeton University
Date:  Wednesday, December 6, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Bruce Kleiner, Yale University
Date:  Friday, December 8, 2006, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine 314
   
Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Enno Lenzman, MIT
Date:  Monday, December 11, 2006, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine 110
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Brendan Hassett, Rice University
Date:  Tuesday, December 12, 2006, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine 322