Calendar
- 01September 1, 2023
CMSA CONFERENCE ON BIG DATA
*****On August 31–Sep 1, 2023 the CMSA will host the ninth annual Conference on Big Data. The Big Data Conference features speakers from the Harvard community as well as scholars from across the globe, with talks focusing on computer science, statistics, math and physics, and economics.
For more information, please see: https://cmsa.fas.harvard.
edu/event/bigdata_2023/ ***** - 05September 5, 2023
Mathematical Picture Language Seminar: Equivalence Principle, De-Sitter Space, and Twistor Theory
I discuss the impact of the positive cosmological constant on the interplay between the equivalence principle in general relativity, and the rules of quantum mechanics. There is an ambiguity in the definition of a phase of a wave function measured by inertial and accelerating observes which is a non-relativistic analogue of the Unruh effect. This will be put in the framework of a non-relativistic limit of twistor space.
- 06September 6, 2023
Combinatorics Seminar: Size of the largest sum-free subset of [n]^3
We prove a conjecture by Cameron and Aydinian in three dimensions, showing that the density of the largest sum-free subset of [n]^3 approaches (10 + √15)/20 as n approaches infinity. The resolution of the two-dimensional problem was accomplished by Elsholtz and Rackham in 2017. In this work, we introduce a different approach that involves considering a relaxed linear program on the projection [n]^2 and then constructing a suitable dual solution. We also explore potential approaches for addressing the higher-dimensional version of this problem.
For information about the Combinatorics Seminar, please visit http://math.mit.edu/seminars/c
ombin/ - 07September 7, 2023
CMSA Probability Seminar: Correlation decay for finite lattice gauge theories
In the setting of lattice gauge theories with finite (possibly non-Abelian) gauge groups at weak coupling, we prove exponential decay of correlations for a wide class of gauge invariant functions, which in particular includes arbitrary functions of Wilson loop observables. Based on joint work with Sky Cao.
- 07September 7, 2023
Special Colloquium - Systems of points with Coulomb interactions
Science Center 5071 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USALarge ensembles of points with Coulomb interactions arise in various settings of condensed matter physics, classical and quantum mechanics, statistical mechanics, random matrices and even approximation theory, and they give rise to a variety of questions pertaining to analysis, Partial Differential Equations and probability.
We will first review these motivations, then present the ”mean-field” derivation of effective models and equations describing the system at the macroscopic scale. We then explain how to analyze the next order behavior, giving information on the configurations at the microscopic level and connecting with crystallization questions, and finish with the description of the effect of temperature.
Talk will be followed by Tea in the Math Common Room – Science Center, 4th Floor