Colloquia: Difference between revisions

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(Hosted by Gorin)
(Hosted by Gorin)
'''Towards KPZ Universality'''
The 1-d KPZ universality class contains random interface growth models
as well as random polymer free energies and driven diffusive systems. 
The KPZ fixed point has now been determined, through the exact solution of a special model
in the class, TASEP, and is expected to describe the asymptotic fluctuations for all models in the class.
It is an integrable Markov process, with transition probabilities described by a system of integrable PDE’s. 
Very recently, new techniques have become available to prove
the convergence of the KPZ equation itself, as well as some non-integrable extensions
of TASEP, to the KPZ fixed point.  This talk will be a gentle introduction to these developments
with no prior knowledge assumed.  The results are, variously, joint works with
Daniel Remenik, Konstantin Matetski, and Sourav Sarkar.


== November 6, 2020, [http://math.jhu.edu/~sakellar/ Yiannis Sakellaridis] (Johns Hopkins University)==
== November 6, 2020, [http://math.jhu.edu/~sakellar/ Yiannis Sakellaridis] (Johns Hopkins University)==

Revision as of 00:35, 12 October 2020


UW Madison mathematics Colloquium is ONLINE on Fridays at 4:00 pm.


Fall 2020

September 25, 2020, Joseph Landsberg (Texas A&M)

(Hosted by Gurevitch)

From theoretic computer science to algebraic geometry: how the complexity of matrix multiplication led me to the Hilbert scheme of points.

In 1968 Strassen discovered the way we multiply nxn matrices (row/column) is not the most efficient algorithm possible. Subsequent work has led to the astounding conjecture that as the size n of the matrices grows, it becomes almost as easy to multiply matrices as it is to add them. I will give a history of this problem and explain why it is natural to study it using algebraic geometry and representation theory. I will conclude by discussing recent exciting developments that explain the second phrase in the title.

October 9, 2020, Carolina Araujo (IMPA)

(Hosted by Ellenberg)

Symmetries in Algebraic Geometry and Cremona transformations

In this talk I will discuss symmetries of complex algebraic varieties. When studying a projective variety $X$, one usually wants to understand its symmetries. Conversely, the structure of the group of automorphisms of $X$ encodes relevant geometric properties of $X$. After describing some examples of automorphism groups of projective varieties, I will discuss why the notion of automorphism is too rigid in the scope of birational geometry. We are then led to consider another class of symmetries of $X$, its birational self-maps. Birational self-maps of the projective space $\mathbb{P}^n$ are called Cremona transformations. Describing the structure of the group of Cremona transformations of the plane is a classical problem that goes back to the 19th century. In higher dimensions, not so much is known, and a natural problem is to construct interesting subgroups of the Cremona group. I will end by discussing a recent work with Alessio Corti and Alex Massarenti, where we investigate subgroups of the Cremona group consisting of symmetries preserving some special meromorphic volume forms.

October 23, 2020, Jeremy Quastel (University of Toronto)

(Hosted by Gorin)

Towards KPZ Universality

The 1-d KPZ universality class contains random interface growth models as well as random polymer free energies and driven diffusive systems. The KPZ fixed point has now been determined, through the exact solution of a special model in the class, TASEP, and is expected to describe the asymptotic fluctuations for all models in the class. It is an integrable Markov process, with transition probabilities described by a system of integrable PDE’s. Very recently, new techniques have become available to prove the convergence of the KPZ equation itself, as well as some non-integrable extensions of TASEP, to the KPZ fixed point. This talk will be a gentle introduction to these developments with no prior knowledge assumed. The results are, variously, joint works with Daniel Remenik, Konstantin Matetski, and Sourav Sarkar.

November 6, 2020, Yiannis Sakellaridis (Johns Hopkins University)

(Hosted by Gurevitch)

November 20, 2020, Ngoc Mai Tran (University of Texas)

(Hosted by Rodriguez)

December 4, 2020, Federico Ardila (San Francisco)

(Hosted by Ellenberg)

Past Colloquia

Spring 2020

Fall 2019

Spring 2019

Fall 2018

Spring 2018

Fall 2017

Spring 2017

Fall 2016

Spring 2016

Fall 2015

Spring 2015

Fall 2014

Spring 2014

Fall 2013

Spring 2013

Fall 2012

WIMAW