9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 - CMSA EVENT: CMSA Interdisciplinary Science Seminar: A universal triangulation for flat tori
Speaker: Francis Lazarus – CNRS / Grenoble University 9:00 AM-10:00 AM January 13, 2022
A celebrated theorem of Nash completed by Kuiper implies that every smooth Riemannian surface has a C¹ isometric embedding in the Euclidean 3-space E³. An analogous result, due to Burago and Zalgaller, states that every polyhedral surface, obtained by gluing Euclidean triangles, has an isometric PL embedding in E³. In particular, this provides PL isometric embeddings for every flat torus (a quotient of E² by a rank 2 lattice). However, the proof of Burago and Zalgaller is partially constructive, relying on the Nash-Kuiper theorem. In practice, it produces PL embeddings with a huge number of vertices, moreover distinct for every flat torus. Based on a construction of Zalgaller and on recent works by Arnoux et al. we exhibit a universal triangulation with less than 10.000 vertices, admitting for any flat torus an isometric embedding that is linear on each triangle. Based on joint work with Florent Tallerie.
Zoom ID: 950 2372 5230 (Password: cmsa)
| 14 | 15 |
16 | 17 | 18 - CMSA EVENT: Quantum Matter in Mathematics and Physics: Metals with strongly correlated electrons: quantum criticality, disordered interactions, Planckian dissipation, and scale invariance
Speaker: Aavishkar Patel – UC Berkeley 2:30 PM-4:00 PM January 18, 2022
Metals that do not fit Landau’s famous Fermi liquid paradigm of quasiparticles are plentiful in experiments, but constructing their theoretical description is a major challenge in modern quantum many-body physics. I will describe new models that can systematically describe such non-Fermi liquid metals at quantum critical points, and that allow for the accurate computation of a whole host of experimentally measurable static and dynamic quantities despite the presence of both strong correlations and disorder. I will further demonstrate that disorder coupling to interaction operators can lead to the experimentally observed linear-in-temperature (T-linear) resistivity seen at metallic quantum critical points, and can also generate the observed universal “Planckian” transport scattering rate of kBT/ℏ. Finally, I will show that “perfect” T-linear resistivity is associated with an energy invariant quantity defined in the many-body microcanonical ensemble, which motivates the existence of a deep connection between the T-linear resistivity seen at high temperatures and low temperatures with the same slope in many quantum critical materials.
https://harvard.zoom.us/j/977347126 Password: cmsa
| 19 | 20 - CMSA EVENT: CMSA: Markov chains, optimal control, and reinforcement learning
Speaker: Yann Ollivier – Facebook 9:00 AM-10:00 AM January 20, 2022
Markov decision processes are a model for several artificial intelligence problems, such as games (chess, Go…) or robotics. At each timestep, an agent has to choose an action, then receives a reward, and then the agent’s environment changes (deterministically or stochastically) in response to the agent’s action. The agent’s goal is to adjust its actions to maximize its total reward. In principle, the optimal behavior can be obtained by dynamic programming or optimal control techniques, although practice is another story. Here we consider a more complex problem: learn all optimal behaviors for all possible reward functions in a given environment. Ideally, such a “controllable agent” could be given a description of a task (reward function, such as “you get +10 for reaching here but -1 for going through there”) and immediately perform the optimal behavior for that task. This requires a good understanding of the mapping from a reward function to the associated optimal behavior. We prove that there exists a particular “map” of a Markov decision process, on which near-optimal behaviors for all reward functions can be read directly by an algebraic formula. Moreover, this “map” is learnable by standard deep learning techniques from random interactions with the environment. We will present our recent theoretical and empirical results in this direction.
Zoom ID: 950 2372 5230 (Password: cmsa)
| 21 | 22 |
23 | 24 | 25 - CMSA EVENT: CMSA Combinatorics, Physics and Probability Seminar: Adventures in Perturbation Theory
Speaker: Jacob Bourjaily – Penn State University, Eberly College of Science 9:30 AM-10:30 AM January 25, 2022
Recent years have seen tremendous advances in our understanding of perturbative quantum field theory—fueled largely by discoveries (and eventual explanations and exploitation) of shocking simplicity in the mathematical form of the predictions made for experiment. Among the most important frontiers in this progress is the understanding of loop amplitudes—their mathematical form, underlying geometric structure, and how best to manifest the physical properties of finite observables in general quantum field theories. This work is motivated in part by the desire to simplify the difficult work of doing Feynman integrals. I review some of the examples of this progress, and describe some ongoing efforts to recast perturbation theory in terms that expose as much simplicity (and as much physics) as possible.
https://harvard.zoom.us/j/91799784675?pwd=MS9LV25DWk9RcmJoRVM0K3RGWkFRdz09 Password: 1251442 - CMSA EVENT: Harvard-CUHK-YMSC Differential Geometry Seminar : Cohomology of the moduli of Higgs bundles via positive characteristic
Speaker: Professor Davesh Maulik – Massachusetts Institute of Technology 8:30 PM-9:30 PM January 25, 2022
In this talk, I will survey the P=W conjecture, which describes certain structures of the cohomology of the moduli space of Higgs bundles on a curve in terms of the character variety of the curve. I will then explain how certain symmetries of this cohomology, which are predictions of this conjecture, can be constructed using techniques from non-abelian Hodge theory in positive characteristic. Based on joint work with Mark de Cataldo, Junliang Shen, and Siqing Zhang.
https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/99708889880 (Meeting ID: 997 0888 9880; Passcode: 20220126)
| 26 - : CMSA Colloquium: The black hole information paradox
Speaker: Samir Mathur – Ohio State University 9:30 AM-10:30 AM January 26, 2022
In 1975, Stephen Hawking showed that black holes radiate away in a manner that violates quantum theory. Starting in 1997, it was observed that black holes in string theory did not have the form expected from general relativity: in place of “empty space will all the mass at the center”, one finds a “fuzzball” where the mass is distributed throughout the interior of the horizon. This resolves the paradox, but opposition to this resolution came from groups who sought to extrapolate some ideas in holography. In 2009 it was shown, using some theorems from quantum information theory, that these extrapolations were incorrect, and the fuzzball structure was essential for resolving the puzzle. Opposition continued along different lines, with a postulate that information would leak out through wormholes. Recently, it was shown that this wormhole idea had some basic flaws, leaving the fuzzball paradigm as the natural resolution of Hawking’s puzzle.
https://harvard.zoom.us/j/95767170359 (Password: cmsa) - CMSA EVENT: CMSA New Technologies in Mathematics Seminar: Machine learning with mathematicians
Speaker: Alex Davies – DeepMind 2:00 PM-3:00 PM January 26, 2022
Can machine learning be a useful tool for research mathematicians? There are many examples of mathematicians pioneering new technologies to aid our understanding of the mathematical world: using very early computers to help formulate the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture and using computer aid to prove the four colour theorem are among the most notable. Up until now there hasn’t been significant use of machine learning in the field and it hasn’t been clear where it might be useful for the questions that mathematicians care about. In this talk we will discuss the results of our recent Nature paper, where we worked together with top mathematicians to use machine learning to achieve two new results – proving a new connection between the hyperbolic and geometric structure of knots, and conjecturing a resolution to a 50-year problem in representation theory, the combinatorial invariance conjecture. Through these examples we demonstrate a way that machine learning can be used by mathematicians to help guide the development of surprising and beautiful new conjectures.
| 27 - CMSA EVENT: CMSA Active Matter Seminar: Learning to School in the presence of hydrodynamic interactions
Speaker: Petros Koumoutsakos – Harvard 1:00 PM-2:00 PM January 27, 2022
Fluids pervade complex systems, ranging from fish schools, to bacterial colonies and nanoparticles in drug delivery. Despite its importance, little is known about the role of fluid mechanics in such applications. Is schooling the result of vortex dynamics synthesized by individual fish wakes or the result of behavioral traits? Is fish schooling energetically favorable? I will present multifidelity computational studies of collective swimming in 2D and 3D flows. Our studies demonstrate that classical models of collective swimming (like the Reynolds model) fail to maintain coherence in the presence of long range hydrodynamic interactions. We demonstrate in turn that collective swimming can be achieved through reinforcement learning. We extend these studies to 2D and 3D viscous flows governed by the Navier Stokes equations. We examine various hydrodynamic benefits with a progressive increase of the school size and demonstrate the importance of controlling the vorticity field generated by up to 300 synchronized swimmers.
- SEMINARS: Master Teapots and Entropy Algorithms for the Mandelbrot set
Speaker: Kathryn Lindsey – Boston College 4:00 PM-6:00 PM January 27, 2022
The core entropy of a postcritically finite quadratic polynomial is the topological entropy of its restriction to its Hubbard tree. Core entropy is also the logarithm of the largest eigenvalue of the matrix associated to the Markov partition of the Hubbard tree obtained by cutting the tree at the postcritical set. Tiozzo proved that core entropy is a continuous function of external angle for the Mandelbrot set. How do the other (non-largest) eigenvalues of the Markov transition matrix vary with external angle? In a recent preprint, G. Tiozzo, C. Wu and I answered this question. We defined “Master Teapots” associated to principal veins in the Mandelbrot set and proved that the eigenvalues outside the unit circle move continuously while roots inside the unit circle “persist.” This talk will discuss this circle of ideas and results, and is based on joint work with G. Tiozzo and C. Wu.
- SEMINARS: Master Teapots and Entropy Algorithms for the Mandelbrot set
Speaker: Kathryn Lindsey – Boston College 4:00 PM-6:00 PM January 27, 2022
The core entropy of a postcritically finite quadratic polynomial is the topological entropy of its restriction to its Hubbard tree. Core entropy is also the logarithm of the largest eigenvalue of the matrix associated to the Markov partition of the Hubbard tree obtained by cutting the tree at the postcritical set. Tiozzo proved that core entropy is a continuous function of external angle for the Mandelbrot set. How do the other (non-largest) eigenvalues of the Markov transition matrix vary with external angle? In a recent preprint, G. Tiozzo, C. Wu and I answered this question. We defined “Master Teapots” associated to principal veins in the Mandelbrot set and proved that the eigenvalues outside the unit circle move continuously while roots inside the unit circle “persist.” This talk will discuss this circle of ideas and results, and is based on joint work with G. Tiozzo and C. Wu.
| 28 - CMSA EVENT: CMSA Quantum Matter in Mathematics and Physics: Maximal quantum chaos of the critical Fermi surface
Speaker: Maria Tikhanovskaya – Harvard 2:30 PM-4:00 PM January 28, 2022
In this talk, I will describe many-body quantum chaos in a recently proposed large-N theory for critical Fermi surfaces in two spatial dimensions, by computing out-of-time-order correlation functions. I will use the ladder identity proposed by Gu and Kitaev, and show that the chaos Lyapunov exponent in this system takes on the maximum possible value of 2πkBT/ℏ, where T is the absolute temperature. In addition, by varying the dynamic critical exponent, I will show that the maximal chaos persists only in the regime where quasiparticles are absent. When quasiparticles are present, the Lyapunov exponent scales with the temperature as ~ T^a, where a < 1, which is parametrically smaller than the maximal rate.
https://harvard.zoom.us/j/977347126 Password: cmsa
| 29 |