Calendar

Time interval: Events:

Today, Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Posted February 3, 2025

Informal Geometry and Topology Seminar Questions or comments?

1:30 pm

Huong Vo, Louisiana State University
TBD

Tomorrow, Thursday, March 6, 2025

Posted November 21, 2024
Last modified March 5, 2025

Applied Analysis Seminar Questions or comments?

3:30 pm Lockett 233

Christoph Fischbacher, Baylor University
Non-selfadjoint operators with non-local point interactions

In this talk, I will discuss non-selfadjoint differential operators of the form $i\frac{d}{dx}+V+k\langle \delta,\cdot\rangle$ and $-\frac{d^2}{dx^2}+V+k\langle \delta,\cdot\rangle$, where $V$ is a bounded complex potential. The additional term, formally given by $k\langle \delta,\cdot\rangle$, is referred to as ``non-local point interaction" and has been studied in the selfadjoint context by Albeverio, Cojuhari, Debowska, I.L. Nizhnik, and L.P. Nizhnik. I will begin with a discussion of the spectrum of the first-order operators on the interval and give precise estimates on the location of the eigenvalues. Moreover, we will show that the root vectors of these operators form a Riesz basis. If the initial operator is dissipative (all eigenvalues have nonnegative imaginary part), I will discuss the possibility of choosing the non-local point interaction in such a way that it generates a real eigenvalue even if the potential is very dissipative. After this, I will focus on the dissipative second order-case and show similar results on constructing realizations with a real eigenvalue. Based on previous and ongoing collaborations with Matthias Hofmann, Andrés Lopez Patiño, Sergey Naboko, Danie Paraiso, Chloe Povey-Rowe, Monika Winklmeier, Ian Wood, and Brady Zimmerman.

Friday, March 7, 2025

Posted February 24, 2025

Combinatorics Seminar Questions or comments?

10:30 am Lockett Hall 233

James "Dylan" Douthitt, Louisiana State University
Induced-minor-closed classes of matroids (dissertation defense)

Abstract: A graph is chordal if every cycle of length at least four has a chord. In 1961, Dirac characterized chordal graphs as those graphs that can be built from complete graphs by repeated clique-sums. Generalizing this, we consider the class of simple $GF(q)$-representable matroids that can be built from projective geometries over $GF(q)$ by repeated generalized parallel connections across projective geometries. We show that this class of matroids is closed under induced minors and characterize the class by its forbidden induced minors, noting that the case when $q=2$ is distinctive. Additionally, we show that the class of $GF(2)$-chordal matroids coincides with the class of binary matroids that have none of $M(K_4)$, $M^*(K_{3,3})$, or $M(C_n)$ for $n\geq 4$ as a flat. We also show that $GF(q)$-chordal matroids can be characterized by an analogous result to Rose's 1970 characterization of chordal graphs as those that have a perfect elimination ordering of vertices. We then describe the classes of binary matroids with pairs from the set $\{M(C_4),M(K_4\backslash e),M(K_4),F_7\}$ as excluded induced minors. Additionally, we prove structural lemmas toward characterizing the class of binary matroids that do not contain $M(K_4)$ as an induced minor.

Friday, March 7, 2025

Posted October 14, 2024
Last modified February 28, 2025

Applied Analysis Seminar Questions or comments?

3:30 pm – 4:30 pm Thursday, March 6, 2025 Lockett 232

Alexandru Hening, Texas A&M University
Stochastic Population Dynamics in Discrete Time

I will present a general theory for coexistence and extinction of ecological communities that are influenced by stochastic temporal environmental fluctuations. The results apply to discrete time stochastic difference equations that can include population structure, eco-environmental feedback or other internal or external factors. Using the general theory, I will showcase some interesting examples. I will end my talk by explaining how the population size at equilibrium is influenced by environmental fluctuations.

Monday, March 10, 2025

Posted February 10, 2025
Last modified February 24, 2025

Mathematical Physics and Representation Theory Seminar

2:30 pm – 3:20 pm 233 Lockett Hall

David Boozer, Indiana University
The combinatorial and gauge-theoretic foam evaluation functors are not the same

Kronheimer and Mrowka have outlined a new approach that could potentially lead to the first non-computer based proof of the four-color theorem. Their approach relies on a functor J-sharp, which they define using gauge theory, from a category of webs in R^3 to the category of finite-dimensional vector spaces over the field of two elements. They have also suggested a possible combinatorial replacement J-flat for J-sharp, which Khovanov and Robert proved is well-defined on a subcategory of planar webs. We exhibit a counterexample that shows the restriction of the functor J-sharp to the subcategory of planar webs is not the same as J-flat.

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Posted February 3, 2025

Informal Geometry and Topology Seminar Questions or comments?

1:30 pm

Emmanuel Astante, Louisiana State University
TBD

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Posted March 4, 2025

Geometry and Topology Seminar Seminar website

2:30 pm Lockett 233

Maarten Mol, University of Toronto
TBA

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Posted February 10, 2025

Mathematical Physics and Representation Theory Seminar

2:30 pm – 3:20 pm Lockett 233

Maarten Mol, University of Toronto
TBA: Additional Topology/Rep Theory talk today