Event Series Algebraic Geometry in String Theory Seminar

Classifying curves on Fano varieties

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

Algebraic Geometry in String Theory Seminar Speaker: Brian Lehmann (Boston College) Title: Classifying curves on Fano varieties Abstract: How can we understand the set of curves on a Fano variety? One perspective is provided by Geometric Manin's Conjecture, a collection of conjectures with roots in arithmetic and topology.  While I will mention some recent progress, the main […]

Directed motion in active matter: Frictiotaxis and flocking

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

Active Matter Seminar Speaker: Ricard Alert, Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems Title: Directed motion in active matter: Frictiotaxis and flocking Abstract: A key feature of active matter is its ability to move directionally, both as individual particles and collectively. I will discuss two examples of directed motion: one in cell migration, and one in collections of self-propelled colloids. […]

Event Series AQFT Seminar Series

AQFT Lecture Series

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

AQFT Lecture Series Speaker: Chen Wan, Rutgers Newark Title: Some examples of the relative Langlands duality Abstract: In this talk I will discuss some examples of the relative Langlands duality (introduced by Ben-Zvi—Sakellaridis—Venkatesh) for strongly tempered spherical varieties. In some cases, I will introduce a relative trace formula comparison for the models and prove the […]

Event Series Member Seminar

Contract Design in Combinatorial Settings

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

CMSA Member Seminar Speaker: Tomer Ezra (Harvard CMSA) Title: Contract Design in Combinatorial Settings Abstract: We study two combinatorial settings of the contract design problem, in which a principal wants to delegate the execution of a costly task. In the first setting, the principal delegates the task to an agent that can take any subset of a […]

Event Series AQFT Seminar Series

AQFT Lecture Series

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

AQFT Lecture Series Speaker: Peng Shan (Tsinghua) Title: Skein algebras and quantized Coulomb branches Abstract: In this talk, we explain how to attach a quantized Coulomb branch in the sense of Braverman-Finkelberg-Nakajima to a compact oriented surface of genus at most one, and compare it to the Kauffman bracket Skein algebra in some special cases. This […]

Event Series Colloquium

Strong bounds for arithmetic progressions

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

Colloquium Speaker: Raghu Meka (UCLA) Title: Strong bounds for arithmetic progressions Abstract: Suppose you have a set S of integers from {1,2,...,N} that contains at least N / C elements. Then for large enough N, must S contain three equally spaced numbers (i.e., a 3-term arithmetic progression)? In 1953, Roth showed this is the case […]

Event Series General Relativity Seminar

High order WENO finite difference scheme  for Einstein-Yang-Mills equations

Virtual

General Relativity Seminar Speaker: Yuewen Chen, Tsinghua University Title: High order WENO finite difference scheme  for Einstein-Yang-Mills equations Abstract: In this talk, we will show the convergence analysis of the first-order finite difference scheme for static spherically symmetric $SU(2)$ Einstein-Yang-Mills (EYM) equations. We also construct a new WENO scheme for EYM.

Event Series CMSA Q&A Seminar

CMSA Q&A Seminar 3/5/2024

Common Room, CMSA 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

CMSA Q&A Seminar Speaker: Yannai Gonczarowski, Harvard University Question: What do people mean when they say 'the intersection between theoretical computer science and economic theory'?

LILO: Learning Interpretable Libraries by Compressing and Documenting Code

CMSA Room G10 CMSA, 20 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

https://youtu.be/ZDMRN0Iyp28 New Technologies in Mathematics Seminar Speaker: Gabe Grand, MIT CSAIL and Dept. of EE&CS Title: LILO: Learning Interpretable Libraries by Compressing and Documenting Code Abstract: While large language models (LLMs) now excel at code generation, a key aspect of software development is the art of refactoring: consolidating code into libraries of reusable and readable programs. […]