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Monday, April 28, 2025

Posted December 10, 2024
Last modified January 5, 2025

Applied Analysis Seminar Questions or comments?

3:30 pm Lockett

Yuanzhen Shao, University of Alabama
Some recent developments in the study of magnetoviscoelastic fluids

In this talk, we consider the motion of a magnetoviscoelastic fluid in a nonisothermal environment. When the deformation tensor field is governed by a regularized transport equation, the motion of the fluid can be described by a quasilinear parabolic system. We will establish the local existence and uniqueness of a strong solution. Then it will be shown that a solution initially close to a constant equilibrium exists globally and converges to a (possibly different) constant equilibrium. Further, we will show that that every solution that is eventually bounded in the topology of the natural state space exists globally and converges to the set of equilibria. If time permits, we will discuss some recent advancements regarding the scenario where the deformation tensor is modeled by a transport equation. In particular, we will discuss the local existence and uniqueness of a strong solution as well as global existence for small initial data.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Posted April 16, 2025

Algebra and Number Theory Seminar Questions or comments?

2:30 pm – 3:30 pm Lockett 233 or click here to attend on Zoom

Andrew Riesen, MIT
Orbifolds of Pointed Vertex Algebras

We will discuss the interplay of tensor categories $C$ with some group action $G$ and orbifolds $V^G$ of vertex operator algebras (VOAs for short). More specifically, we will show how the categorical structure of $\mathrm{TwMod}_G V$ allows one to not only simplify previous results done purely through VOA techniques but vastly extend them. One such example is the Dijkgraaf-Witten conjecture, now a theorem, which describes how the category of modules of a holomorphic orbifold should look like. Additionally, our techniques also allow us to expand the modular fusion categories known to arise from VOAs, we show that every group-theoretical fusion category comes from a VOA orbifold. This talk is based on joint work with Terry Gannon.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Posted January 23, 2025
Last modified January 27, 2025

Geometry and Topology Seminar Seminar website

3:30 pm Lockett 233

Annette Karrer, The Ohio State University
TBA


Posted January 12, 2025
Last modified January 16, 2025

Harmonic Analysis Seminar

3:30 pm Lockett 232

Zi Li Lim, UCLA
TBA

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Posted April 7, 2025
Last modified April 21, 2025

Student Colloquium

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Lockett 241

Mark Ellingham, Vanderbilt University
Twisted duality for graph embeddings and conditions for orientability and bipartiteness

*Twisted duals* of embeddings of graphs in surfaces were introduced by Ellis-Monaghan and Moffatt in 2012. They generalize edge twists, well known since the representation of embeddings using rotation schemes and edge signatures was introduced in the 1970s, and partial duals, defined by Chmutov in 2009. I will explain how twisted duals can be found using combinatorial representations of an embedding known as the *gem* (graph-encoded map) and *jewel*. Several important properties of embedded graphs are linked to parity conditions for closed walks in the gem or jewel, and to orientations of the half-edges of the medial graph of the embedding. Using these conditions, I will discuss how we can characterize which twisted duals are orientable or bipartite. This is joint work with Blake Dunshee.

Friday, May 2, 2025

Posted January 16, 2025
Last modified April 5, 2025

Control and Optimization Seminar Questions or comments?

11:30 am – 12:20 pm Zoom (click here to join)

Bahman Gharesifard, Queen's University
Structural Average Controllability of Ensembles

In ensemble control, the goal is to steer a parametrized collection of independent systems using a single control input. A key technical challenge arises from the fact that this control input must be designed without relying on the specific parameters of the individual systems. Broadly speaking, as the space of possible system parameters grows, so does the size and diversity of the ensemble — making it increasingly difficult to control all members simultaneously. In fact, an important result among the recent advances on this topic states that when the underlying parameterization spaces are multidimensional, real-analytic linear ensemble systems are not L^p-controllable for p>=2. Therefore, one has to relax the notion of controllability and seek more flexible controllability characteristics. In this talk, I consider continuum ensembles of linear time-invariant control systems with single inputs, featuring a sparsity pattern, and study structural average controllability as a relaxation of structural ensemble controllability. I then provide a necessary and sufficient condition for a sparsity pattern to be structurally average controllable.


Posted April 18, 2025

Combinatorics Seminar Questions or comments?

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Lockett 233 (Simulcast via Zoom)

Mark Ellingham, Vanderbilt University
Maximum genus directed embeddings of digraphs

In topological graph theory we often want to find embeddings of a given connected graph with minimum genus, so that the underlying compact surface of the embedding is as simple as possible. If we restrict ourselves to cellular embeddings, where all faces are homeomorphic to disks, then it is also of interest to find embeddings with maximum genus. For undirected graphs this is a very well-solved problem. For digraphs we can consider directed embeddings, where each face is bounded by a directed walk in the digraph. The maximum genus problem for digraphs is related to self-assembly problems for models of graphs built from DNA or polypeptides. Previous work by other people determined the maximum genus for the very special case of regular tournaments, and in some cases of directed 4-regular graphs the maximum genus can be found using an algorithm for the representable delta-matroid parity problem. We describe some recent work, joint with Joanna Ellis-Monaghan of the University of Amsterdam, where we have solved the maximum directed genus problem in some reasonably general situations.