SEMINARS
Updated: 3-16-2011

   

MARCH 2011

   
Joint IAS and Princeton University Number Theory Seminar **please note different location**
Topic: Niebur Integrals and Mock Automorphic Forms
Presenter: Wladimir de Azevedo Pribitkin, College of Staten Island, CUNY
Date: Thursday, March 17, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: IAS - Room S101
Abstract: Among the bounty of brilliancies bequeathed to humanity by Srinivasa Ramanujan, the circle method and the notion of mock theta functions strike wonder and spark intrigue in number theorists fresh and seasoned alike. The former creation was honed to perfection for its original purpose of counting partitions by Hans Rademacher. The latter ingenuity, despite receiving considerable scrutiny, remained largely enigmatic for decades. In 2002 Sander Zwegers ascertained the essential properties characterizing Ramanujan's mock theta functions. This breakthrough has triggered an avalanche of activity (in mathematics and physics) associated with mock automorphic forms. In 1968 Douglas Niebur, acting upon a suggestion made originally by Atle Selberg, uncovered a natural generalization of automorphic forms. His work resolved a question that was addressed initially by his advisor Marvin Knopp. Although Niebur's functions arose from within a completely different context, it turns out that they are related rather closely to mock theta functions. This talk will recount the research of the Rademacher school (including the speaker) pertaining to Niebur integrals, and it will expose their connection with mock automorphic forms and harmonic Maass forms.
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Brother, can you spare a compacton?
Presenter: Philip Rosenau, Tel Aviv University
Date: Monday, March 21, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: Unlike certain personal or national tragedies which may extend indefinitely, patterns observed in nature are of finite extent. Yet, as a rule, the solitary patterns predicted by almost all existing mathematical models extend indefinitely with their tails being a by product of their analytical nature. Rather then viewing such tails as a manifestation of the inherent limitation of math to model physics in detail, we adopt the opposite view: the persistence of tails in a large variety of solitary patterns points to a missing mechanism capable to constrain the pattern. Clearly, to induce a compact pattern one has to escape the curse of analyticity. Differently stated, one has to supplement the existing models with a mechanism(s) which may beget a local singularity. When this is done the resulting local loss of solution's uniqueness enables to connect a smooth part of the solution with the trivial ground state and thus to form an entity with a compact support: the compacton. We shall describe a variety of singularity inducing mechanisms that beget compact solutions of dispersive or dissipative uni and multi-dimensional phenomena. Compactified variants of the K-dV, Klein-Gordon and Schroedinger equations will be surveyed. In Part two of the lecture we shall discuss the intriguing nature of these (weakly strong or strongly weak) solutions, the underlying singularities and their relation with a discrete antecedent where a sharp fronts are replaced with tails decaying at a doubly exponential rate.
   
Topology Seminar **Please note special day, time and location**
Topic: Pseudo-Anosov flows in Seifert fibered and solvable 3-manifolds
Presenter: Sergio Fenley, Florida State University and Princeton University
Date: Tuesday March 22 , 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 601
Abstract: We discuss the following rigidity results: 1) A pseudo-Anosov flow in a Seifert fibered manifold is up to finite covers topologically conjugate to a geodesic flow; 2) A pseudo-Anosov flow in a solv manifold is topologically conjugate to a suspension Anosov flow. The proofs use the structure of the fundamental groups in these manifolds and the topological theory of pseudo-Anosov flows. In particular the proofs use in essential ways the Z or Z+Z normal subgroups of the fundamental group. These normal subgroups interact with the orbit space of the flow or the leaf spaces of the stable/unstable foliations, producing invariant axes and chains of lozenges, which help force the rigidity. This is joint work with Thierry Barbot.
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar **Please note special day and time**
Topic: Massey Triple Products
Presenter: Larry Taylor, IAS
Date: Tuesday, March 22, 2011, Time: 5:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: A technique will be discussed to control the indeterminacy in cohomology Massey triple products. A variety of non-vanishing and vanishing results for Massey triple products are proved using this technique. Here are three examples. Many authors have noticed that non-trivial triple products in a submanifold produce non-trivial triple products in the blowup along the submanifold. Given a map of closed, compact manifolds of the same dimension, f : M → N , then non- trivial triple products with field coefficients in N pull back to non-trivial triple products in M provided the degree of the map is non-zero in the field. •Given two classes x_1 and x_2 in an n-manifold, there is a dual pairing for triple products<x_1,?,x_2> between the image of this triple product in dimension r with the image in dimension n+|x_1|+|x_2|-1-r.
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Corinna Ulcigrai, University of Bristol
Date: Thursday, March 24, 2011, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 801
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Bill Browder, Princeton University
Date: Thursday, March 24, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Joint IAS and Princeton University Number Theory Seminar **please note different location**
Topic: Random maximal isotropic subspaces and Selmer groups
Presenter: Bjorn Poonen, MIT
Date: Thursday, March 24, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: IAS - Room S101
Abstract: We show that the p-Selmer group of an elliptic curve is naturally the intersection of two maximal isotropic subspaces in an infinite-dimensional locally compact quadratic space over F_p. By modeling this intersection as the intersection of a random maximal isotropic subspace with a fixed compact open maximal isotropic subspace, we can explain the known phenomena regarding distribution of Selmer ranks, such as the theorems of Heath-Brown, Swinnerton-Dyer, and Kane for 2-Selmer groups in certain families of quadratic twists, and the average size of 2- and 3-Selmer groups as computed by Bhargava and Shankar. The random model is consistent with Delaunay's heuristics for Sha[p], and predicts that the average rank of elliptic curves is at most 1/2. This is joint work with Eric Rains.
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Partial regularity of a minimizer of the relaxed energy for biharmonic maps
Presenter: Min-Chun Hong, University of Queensland Brisbane
Date: Friday, March 25, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: In 1999, Chang, Wang and Yang established the fundamental result on the partial regularity stationary biharmonic maps into spheres. Since then, the study of biharmonic maps has attracted much attention. In this talk, we will discuss some new result on the relaxed energy for biharmonic maps from an $m$-dimensional domain into spheres for an integer $m\geq 5$. We prove that the minimizer of the relaxed energy of the Hessian energy is biharmonic and smooth outside a singular set $\Sigma$ of finite $(m-4)$-dimensional Hausdorff measure. Moreover, when $m=5$, we also show that the singular set $\Sigma$ is $1$-rectifiable.
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Yuri Tschinkel, NYU
Date: Wednesday, March 30, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: An integral lift of the Gamma-genus
Presenter: Jack Morava, Johns Hopkins University
Date: Thursday, March 31, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: The Hirzebruch genus of a complex-oriented manifold M associated (by Kontsevich) to Euler's Gamma-function has an analytic interpretation as the index of a family of deformations of a Dirac operator, parametrized by the homogeneous space Sp/U; in more homotopy-theoretic terms, it is the homomorphism MU --> MU \smash_{MSp} KO of ring spectra. It also has an interpretation as a kind of equivariant Euler characteristic of the free loopspace of M, suitably polarized. There are further intriguing connections with the theory of asymptotic expansions, involving the values of the zeta function at odd positive integers.
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: Pseudo-Anosov maps with small dilatation
Presenter: Joan Birman, Columbia University
Date: Thursday, March 31, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
APRIL 2011
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: Geometrical variational problems in economics
Presenter: Robert McCann, University of Toronto
Date: Friday, April 1, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Joint Analysis Seminar and PACM Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Peter Jones, Yale University
Date: Monday, April 4, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar **please note special day and time**
Topic: Compact aspherical manifolds whose fundamental groups have center
Presenter: Sylvain Cappell, NYU
Date: Tuesday, April 5, 2011, Time: 5:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: Classical work of Borel had shown that an action of the circle on a manifold with contractible universal cover yields non-trivial center in the manifold's fundamental group. In the early 70's, Conner and Raymond made further deep investigations which led them to conjecture a converse to Borel's result. We construct counter-examples to this conjecture, i.e., we exhibit aspherical manifolds (in all dimensions greater than or equal to 6) which have non-trivial center in their fundamental groups but no circle actions (and hence no compact Lie group actions). The constructions involve synthesizing rather disparate methods of geometric topology, geometric group theory and hyperbolic geometry. (This is joint work with Shmuel Weinberger and Min Yan.)
   
PACM Colloquium - Distinguished Lecture Seminar **Please note special date**
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Ray Goldstein, Cambridge University
Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Thomas Haines, University of Maryland
Date: Wednesday, April 6, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: Moment-angle complexes from simplicial posets
Presenter: Taras Panov, Moscow State University
Date: Thursday, April 7, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: The construction of moment-angle complexes may be extended from simplicial complexes to simplicial posets. As a result, a certain T^m-space Z_S is associated to an arbitrary simplicial poset S on m vertices. Face rings Z[S]$ of simplicial posets generalise those of simplicial complexes, but have much more complicated algebraic structure. These rings Z[S] may be studied by topological methods. The space Z_S has many important topological properties of the original moment-angle complex Z_K associated to a simplicial complex K. In particular, the integral cohomology algebra of Z_S is isomorphic to the Tor-algebra of the face ring Z[S]. This leads directly to a generalisation of Hochster's theorem, expressing the algebraic Betti numbers of the ring Z[S] in terms of the homology of full subposets in S. Finally, the total amount of homology of Z_S may be estimated from below, which settles Halperin's toral rank conjecture for the moment-angle complexes Z_S
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: Geometric structures on moment-angle manifolds
Presenter: Taras Panov, Moscow State University
Date: Thursday, April 7, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract:

Moment-angle complexes are spaces acted on by a torus and parametrised by finite simplicial complexes. They are central objects in toric topology, and currently are gaining much interest in the homotopy theory. Due the their combinatorial origins, moment-angle complexes also find applications in combinatorial geometry and commutative algebra. Moment-angle complexes corresponding to simplicial subdivision of spheres are topological manifolds, and those corresponding to simplicial polytopes admit smooth realisations as intersection of real quadrics in C^m.

After an introductory part describing the general properties of moment-angle complexes we shall concentrate on the complex-analytic and Lagrangian aspects of the theory. We show that the moment-angle manifolds corresponding to complete simplicial fans admit nonKaehler complex-analytic structures. This generalises the known construction of complex-analytic structures on polytopal moment-angle manifolds, coming from identifying them as LVM-manifolds. We proceed by describing the Dolbeault cohomology and certain Hodge numbers of moment-angle manifolds by applying the Borel spectral sequence to holomorphic principal bundles over toric varieties.

A new wide family of minimal Lagrangian submanifolds N in C^m or CP^m can be constructed from intersections of real quadrics. These submanifolds have the following topological properties: every N embeds in the corresponding moment-angle manifold Z, and every N is the total space of two different fibrations, one over the torus T^{m-n} with fibre a real moment-angle manifold R, and another over a small cover with fibre a torus. These properties are used to produce new examples of Lagrangian submanifolds with quite complicated topology. Different parts of this talk are based on joint works with Victor Buchstaber, Andrei Mironov and Yuri Ustinovsky.

   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Dmitri Burago, Penn State
Date: Friday, April 8, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: From (basic) image denoising to surface evolution
Presenter: Antonin Chambolle, CMAP -- Ecole Polytechnique
Date: Monday, April 11, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: It is relatively easy to make a connection between the implicit time-discrete approaches for the mean curvature flow and the "Rudin-Osher-Fatemi" total variation based approach for image denoising. This connection has interesting consequences, allowing to build explicit solutions for the flow of the total variation or study regularity issues, up to showing the existence of the crystalline curvature flow of convex sets or building up efficient algorithms. The talk will explain the relationship between all these problems. (Joint works with V. Caselles, M. Novaga, J. Darbon, T. Pock, D. Cremers).
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Mircea Mustaţă, U. of Michigan
Date: Tuesday, April 12, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar **Please note special day and time**
Topic: The Geometry of Music
Presenter: Dmitri Tymoczko, Princeton University, Department of Music
Date: Tuesday, April 12, 2011, Time: 5:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: In my talk, I explain how to translate basic concepts of music theory into the language of contemporary topology and geometry. Musicians commonly abstract away from five kinds of musical information -- including the order, octave, and specific pitch level of groups of notes. This process produces a family of quotient spaces or orbifolds: for example, two-note chords live on a Mobius strip, while three-note chord-types live on a cone. These spaces provide a general geometrical framework for understanding and interpreting music. Related constructions also appear naturally in other applied-math contexts, for instance in economics.
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Steve Zelditch, Northwestern University
Date: Wednesday, April 13, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: On the rational homotopy type of Moment-angle complexes
Presenter: Sam Gitler, IAS
Date: Thursday, April 14, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: The Rank versus Genus Conjecture
Presenter: Tao Li, Boston College
Date: Thursday, April 14, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
Abstract: We construct a counterexample to the Rank versus Genus Conjecture (also known as the Rank Conjecture), i.e., a closed orientable hyperbolic 3-manifold with rank of its fundamental group smaller than its Heegaard genus.
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Richard Bamler, Princeton University
Date: Friday, April 15, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Likelihood and algebraic maps for stochastic biochemical network models
Presenter: Gregory Rempala, Medical College of Georgia
Date: Monday, April 18, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: With the development of new sequencing technologies of modern molecular biology, it is increasingly common to collect time-series data on the abundance of molecular species encoded within the genomes. This presentation shall illustrate how such data may be used to infer the parameters as well as the structure of the biochemical network under mass-action kinetics. Given certain constraints on the geometry of the stoichiometric space, we use algebraic methods as an alternative to conventional hierarchical graphical models, to carry out network structure inference by identifying reaction rate constants which are significantly different from zero.
   
Algebraic Geometry Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Charles Doran, U. Alberta
Date: Tuesday, April 19, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 322
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Alexander Bufetov, Rice University
Date: Wednesday, April 20, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Ergodic Theory and Statistical Mechanics Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Alexander Bufetov, Rice University
Date: Thursday, April 21, 2011, Time: 2:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 801
   
Discrete Mathematics Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Paul Wollan, Sapienza University of Rome and Georgia Tech
Date: Thursday, April 21, 2011, Time: 2:15 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 224
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: Unstable operations in etale and motivic cohomology
Presenter: Chuck Weibel, Rutgers University
Date: Thursday, April 21, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Princeton University and IAS Number Theory Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Henri Darmon, McGill University
Date: Thursday, April 21, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
   
PACM Colloquium
Topic: Learning from Labeled and Unlabeled Data: Global vs. Multiple Approaches
Presenter: Boaz Nadler, Weizmann Institute - Israel
Date: Monday, April 25, 2011, Time: 4:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 214
Abstract: In recent years there is increasing interest in learning from both labeled and unlabeled data (a.k.a. semi-supervised learning, or SSL). The key assumption in SSL, under which an abundance of unlabeled data may help, is that there is some relation between the unknown response function to be learned and the marginal density of the predictor variables. In the first part of this talk I'll present a statistical analysis of two popular graph based SSL algorithms: Laplacian regularization method and Laplacian eigenmaps. In the second part I'll present a novel multiscale approach for SSL as well as supporting theory. Some intimate connections to harmonic analysis on abstract data sets will be discussed. Joint work with Nati Srebro (TTI), Xueyuan Zhou (Chicago), Matan Gavish (WIS/Stanford) and Ronald Coifman (Yale).
   
Algebraic Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Victor Buchstaber, Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences
Date: Thursday, April 28, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Peter Ozsvath, MIT
Date: Thursday, April 28, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Artem Pulemotov, Chicago
Date: Friday, April 29, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
MAY 2011
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Gautam Chinta, The City University of New York
Date: Wednesday, May 4, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Topology Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Liam Watson, UCLA
Date: Thursday, May 5, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis Seminar
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Yannick Slre, Universite de Aix-Marseille III
Date: Friday, May 6, 2011, Time: 3:00 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314
   
Department Colloquium
Topic: TBA
Presenter: Balazs Szegedy, University of Toronto
Date: Wednesday, May 11, 2011, Time: 4:30 p.m., Location: Fine Hall 314