Felix Otto : Gergen Lecture - Speaker, Felix Otto
- Gergen Lectures ( 407 Views )In three specific examples, we shall demonstrate how the theory of partial differential equations (PDEs) relates to pattern formation in nature: Spinodal decomposition and the Cahn-Hilliard equation, Rayleigh-B\'enard convection and the Boussinesq approximation, rough crystal growth and the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation. These examples from different applications have in common that only a few physical mechanisms, which are modeled by simple-looking evolutionary PDEs, lead to complex patterns. These mechanisms will be explained, numerical simulation shall serve as a visual experiment. Numerical simulations also reveal that generic solutions of these deterministic equations have stationary or self-similar statistics that are independent of the system size and of the details of the initial data. We show how PDE methods, i. e. a priori estimates, can be used to understand some aspects of this universal behavior. In case of the Cahn-Hilliard equation, the method makes use of its gradient flow structure and a property of the energy landscape. In case of the Boussinesq equation, a ``driven gradient flow'', the background field method is used. In case of the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation, that mixes conservative and dissipative dynamics, the method relies on a new result on Burgers' equation.
Robert V. Kohn : A Variational Perspective on Wrinkling Patterns in Thin Elastic Sheets: What sets the patterns seen in geometry-driven wrinkling?
- Gergen Lectures ( 286 Views )The wrinkling of thin elastic sheets is very familiar: our skin
wrinkles, drapes have coarsening folds, and a sheet stretched
over a round surface must wrinkle or fold.
What kind of mathematics is relevant? The stable configurations of a
sheet are local minima of a variational problem with a rather special
structure, involving a nonconvex membrane term (which favors isometry)
and a higher-order bending term (which penalizes curvature). The bending
term is a singular perturbation; its small coefficient is the sheet
thickness squared. The patterns seen in thin sheets arise from energy
minimization -- but not in the same way that minimal surfaces arise
from area minimization. Rather, the analysis of wrinkling is an example
of "energy-driven pattern formation," in which our goal is to understand
the asymptotic character of the minimizers in a suitable limit (as the
nondimensionalized sheet thickness tends to zero).
What kind of understanding is feasible? It has been fruitful to focus
on how the minimum energy scales with sheet thickness, i.e. the "energy
scaling law." This approach entails proving upper bounds and
lower bounds that scale the same way. The upper bounds tend to be
easier, since nature gives us a hint. The lower bounds are more subtle,
since they must be ansatz-free; in many cases, the arguments used to
prove the lower bounds help explain "why" we see particular patterns.
A related but more ambitious goal is to identify the prefactor as well
as the scaling law; Ian Tobasco's striking recent work on geometry-driven
wrinkling has this character.
Lecture 1 will provide an overview of this topic (assuming no background
in elasticity, thin sheets, or the calculus of variations). Lecture 2 will
discuss some examples of tensile wrinkling, where identification of the
energy scaling law is intimately linked to understanding the local
length scale of the wrinkles. Lecture 3 will discuss our emerging
undertanding of geometry-driven wrinkling, where (as Tobasco has
shown) it is the prefactor not the scaling law that explains the
patterns seen experimentally.
Christopher Hacon : Birational geometry in characteristic $p>5$
- Gergen Lectures ( 285 Views )After the recent exciting progress in understanding the geometry of algebraic varieties over the complex numbers, it is natural to try to understand the geometry of varieties over an algebraically closed field of characteristic $p>0$. Many technical issues arise in this context. Nevertheless, there has been much recent progress. In particular, the MMP was established for 3-folds in characteristic $p>5$ by work of Birkar, Hacon, Xu and others. In this talk we will discuss some of the challenges and recent progress in this active area.
Andrei Zelevinsky : Cluster algebras via quivers with potentials
- Gergen Lectures ( 283 Views )This lecture ties together the strands developed in the first two lectures. We discuss a recent proof (due to H. Derksen, J. Weyman, and the speaker) of a series of conjectures on cluster algebras by means of the machinery of quivers with potentials. An important ingredient of our argument is a categorification of cluster algebras using quiver Grassmannians, a family of projective algebraic varieties that are a far-reaching generalization of ordinary Grassmannians. Generalizing an idea due to P. Caldero, F. Chapoton and B. Keller, we show that the Euler characteristics of these varieties carry crucial information about the structure of cluster algebras.
Robert V. Kohn : A Variational Perspective on Wrinkling Patterns in Thin Elastic Sheets: What sets the local length scale of tensile wrinkling?
- Gergen Lectures ( 282 Views )The wrinkling of thin elastic sheets is very familiar: our skin
wrinkles, drapes have coarsening folds, and a sheet stretched
over a round surface must wrinkle or fold.
What kind of mathematics is relevant? The stable configurations of a
sheet are local minima of a variational problem with a rather special
structure, involving a nonconvex membrane term (which favors isometry)
and a higher-order bending term (which penalizes curvature). The bending
term is a singular perturbation; its small coefficient is the sheet
thickness squared. The patterns seen in thin sheets arise from energy
minimization -- but not in the same way that minimal surfaces arise
from area minimization. Rather, the analysis of wrinkling is an example
of "energy-driven pattern formation," in which our goal is to understand
the asymptotic character of the minimizers in a suitable limit (as the
nondimensionalized sheet thickness tends to zero).
What kind of understanding is feasible? It has been fruitful to focus
on how the minimum energy scales with sheet thickness, i.e. the "energy
scaling law." This approach entails proving upper bounds and
lower bounds that scale the same way. The upper bounds tend to be
easier, since nature gives us a hint. The lower bounds are more subtle,
since they must be ansatz-free; in many cases, the arguments used to
prove the lower bounds help explain "why" we see particular patterns.
A related but more ambitious goal is to identify the prefactor as well
as the scaling law; Ian Tobasco's striking recent work on geometry-driven
wrinkling has this character.
Lecture 1 will provide an overview of this topic (assuming no background
in elasticity, thin sheets, or the calculus of variations). Lecture 2 will
discuss some examples of tensile wrinkling, where identification of the
energy scaling law is intimately linked to understanding the local
length scale of the wrinkles. Lecture 3 will discuss our emerging
undertanding of geometry-driven wrinkling, where (as Tobasco has
shown) it is the prefactor not the scaling law that explains the
patterns seen experimentally.
Jordan S. Ellenberg : Stability and Representations
- Gergen Lectures ( 278 Views )The notion of stability --speaking loosely, "sometimes an infinite sequence of vector spaces eventually starts being constant" -- appears in many branches of mathematics, perhaps most notably topology, where Harer's theorem about the stability of the homology of mapping class groups has driven decades of work. Some natural sequences of vector spaces are evidently NOT eventually constant: for instance, the space Q_n of quadratic polynomials in n variables has dimension (1/2)n(n-1), so gets larger and larger as n goes to infinity. On the other hand, Q_n carries an action of the symmetric group S_n by permutation of coordinates. We will discuss a new framework which allows us to speak meaningfully about what it means for a sequence of representations of S_n to be stable. It turns out that the structures we define are ubiquitous, appearing in topology (e.g. homology groups of configuration spaces and of moduli spaces of curves) algebraic combinatorics (e.g. the graded pieces of diagonal coinvariant algebras) and algebraic geometry (e.g. spaces of polynomials on discriminant and rank varieties.) We prove, for instance, that all these sequences of vector spaces have dimension which is eventually a polynomial in n.
Richard Schoen : Positive scalar curvature and connections with relativity
- Gergen Lectures ( 275 Views )In this series of three lectures we will describe positivity conditions on Riemannian metrics including the classical conditions of positive sectional, Ricci, and scalar curvature. We will discuss open problems and recent progress including our recent proof of the differentiable sphere theorem (joint with Simon Brendle). That proof employs the Ricci flow, so we will spend some time explaining that technique. Finally we will discuss problems related to positive scalar curvature including some high dimensional issues which occur in that theory. If time allows we will describe recent progress on black hole topologies. These lectures, especially the first two, are intended for a general audience.
Luis Caffarelli : Degenerate ellipticity and the porous media equation
- Gergen Lectures ( 273 Views )In the first lecture I will give a brief discussion of local and non local diffusion and degenerate ellipticity and different local and non local models for compressible flows in porous media.
In the second and third lectures I will discuss some properties of the
(infinitesimal) porous media equation, a non local in space model and
equations with memory.
Andrei Zelevinsky : Quivers with potentials, their representation and mutations
- Gergen Lectures ( 272 Views )A quiver is a finite directed graph. A quiver representation assigns a finite-dimensional vector space to each vertex, and a linear map between the corresponding spaces to each arrow. A fundamental role in the theory of quiver representations is played by Bernstein-Gelfand-Ponomarev reflection functors associated to every source or sink of a quiver. In joint work with H. Derksen and J. Weyman (based on an earlier joint work with R. Marsh and M. Reineke) we extend these functors to arbitrary vertices. This construction is based on a framework of quivers with potentials; their representations are quiver representations satisfying relations of a special kind between the linear maps attached to arrows. The motivations for this work come from several sources: superpotentials in physics, Calabi-Yau algebras, and cluster algebras. However, no special knowledge will be assumed in any of these subjects, and the exposition aims to be accessible to graduate students.
Francis Brown : Periods, Galois theory and particle physics: General introduction to periods
- Gergen Lectures ( 270 Views )A period is a certain kind of complex number which can be written as an integral of algebraic quantities. Kontsevich and Zagier conjectured that all identities between periods can be obtained from the elementary rules of calculus. After discussing several examples I will focus on the case of multiple zeta values which were first introduced in a special case by Euler, and now occur in numerous branches of mathematics. They satisfy many families of relations which are the subject of several open conjectures.
Gang Tian : Geometry and Analysis of low-dimensional manifolds
- Gergen Lectures ( 35 Views )In this series of talks, I will focus on geometry and analysis of manifolds of dimension 2, 3 or 4. The first talk is a general introduction of this series. I will start the talk by reviewing some classical theories on Riemann surfaces and their recent variations in geometric analysis. Then we survey some recent progress on 3- and 4-manifolds. I hope that this talk will show some clues how geometric equations can be applied to studying geometry of underlying spaces. In the second talk, I will discuss recent works on the Ricci flow and its application to the geometrization of 3-manifolds, in particular, I will briefly discuss Perelman's work towards the Poincare conjecture. In last talk, I will discuss geometric equations in dimension 4 and how they can be applied to studying geoemtry of underlying 4-spaces. Some recent results will be discussed and some open problems will be given.