Curves, abelian varieties, and the moduli of cubic threefolds

Speaker: 

NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Sebastian Casalaina-Martin

Institution: 

Harvard University/NSF

Time: 

Friday, November 30, 2007 - 4:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

A result of Clemens and Griffiths says that a smooth cubic threefold can be recovered from its intermediate Jacobian. In this talk I will discuss the possible degenerations of these abelian varieties, and give a description of the compactification of the moduli space of cubic threefolds obtained in this way. The relation between this compactification and those constructed in the work of Allcock-Carlson-Toledo and Looijenga-Swierstra will also be considered, and is similar in spirit to the relation between the various compactifications of the moduli spaces of low genus curves. This is joint work with Radu Laza.

Brownian motions interacting through ranks and a phase transition phenomenon.

Speaker: 

Visiting Assistant Professor Soumik Pal

Institution: 

Cornell University

Time: 

Tuesday, November 27, 2007 - 11:00am

Location: 

MSTB 254

Consider a particle in a finite dimensional Euclidean space performing a Brownian motion with an instantaneous drift vector at every time point determined by the order in which the coordinates of its location can be arranged as a decreasing sequence. These processes appear naturally in a variety of areas from queueing theory, statistical physics, and economic modeling. One is generally interested in the spacings between the ordered coordinates under such a motion.

For finite n, the invariant distribution of the vector of spacings can be completely described and is a function of the drift. We show, as n grows to infinity, a curious phenomenon occurs. We look at a transformation of the original process by exponentiating the location coordinates and dividing them by their total sum. Irrespective of the drifts, under the invariant distribution, only one of three things can happen to the transformed values: either they all go to zero, or the maximum grows to one while the rest go to zero, or they stabilize and converge in law to some member of a two parameter family of random point processes. This family known as the Poisson-Dirichlet's appears in genetics and renewal theory and is well studied. The proof borrows ideas from Talagrand's analysis of Derrida's Random Energy Model of spin glasses. We also consider another alternative starting with a countable collection of Brownian motions. This countable model is related to the Harris model of elastic collisions and the discrete Ruzmaikina-Aizenmann model for competing particles.

This is based on separate joint works with Sourav Chatterjee and Jim Pitman.

Expanders: from arithmetic to combinatorics and back

Speaker: 

von Neumann Early Career Fellow Alexander Gamburd

Institution: 

Institute for Advanced Study

Time: 

Thursday, November 29, 2007 - 2:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

Expanders are highly-connected sparse graphs widely used in computer science. The optimal expanders (Ramanujan graphs) were constructed in 1988 by Margulis, Lubotzky, Phillips and Sarnak using deep results from the theory of automorphic forms. In recent joint work with Bourgain and Sarnak tools from additive combinatorics were used to prove that a wide class of "congruence graphs" are expanders; this expansion property plays a crucial role in establishing novel sieving results.

Curves, their jacobians and endomorphisms

Speaker: 

Professor Yuri Zarhin

Institution: 

Pennsylvania State University

Time: 

Wednesday, November 28, 2007 - 4:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

A smooth plane projective cubic curve (also known as an elliptic curve or a curve of genus 1) carries a natural structure of a commutative group: the addition is defined geometrically by the "chord and tangent method". An attempt "to add" points on a curve of arbitrary positive genus g leads to the notion of the jacobian of the curve. This jacobian is a g-dimensional commutative algebraic group that is a projective algebraic variety; in particular, it cannot be realized as a matrix group. Geometric properties of jacobians play a crucial role in the study of arithmetic and geometric properties of curves involved. One of the most important geometric invariants of a jacobian is its endomorphism ring.

We discuss how to compute explicitly endomorphism rings of jacobians for certain interesting classes of curves that may be viewed as natural (and useful) generalizations of elliptic curves.

Generalized theta functions

Speaker: 

Szego Assistant Professor Dragos Oprea

Institution: 

Stanford University

Time: 

Monday, November 26, 2007 - 11:00am

Location: 

MSTB 254

The Jacobian of any compact Riemann surface carries a natural theta divisor, which can be defined as the zero locus of an explicit function, the Riemann theta function. I will describe a generalization of this idea, which starts by replacing the Jacobian with the moduli space of sheaves over a Riemann surface or a higher dimensional base. These moduli spaces also carry theta divisors, described as zero loci of "generalized" theta functions. I will discuss recent progress in the study of generalized theta functions. In particular, I will emphasize an unexpected geometric duality between spaces of generalized theta functions, as well as its geometric consequences for the study of the moduli spaces of sheaves.

Proving projective determinacy

Speaker: 

Professor Ralf Schindler

Institution: 

UC Berkeley and Universitaet Muenster, Germany

Time: 

Monday, November 26, 2007 - 2:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

The principle of projective determinacy, being independent from the standard axiom system of set theory, produces a fairly complete picture of the theory of "definable" sets of reals. It is an amazing fact that projective determinacy is implied by many apparently entirely unrelated statements. One has to go through inner model theory in order to prove such implications.

On the regularity of weak solutions of the 3D Navier-Stokes equations in the largest critical space.

Speaker: 

L.E. Dickson Instructor Alexey Cheskidov

Institution: 

University of Chicago

Time: 

Tuesday, November 27, 2007 - 3:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

Even though the regularity problem for the 3D Navier-Stokes equations is far from been solved, numerous regularity criteria have been proved since the work of Leray. We will discuss some classical results as well as their extensions in Besov spaces.

Nonlinear water waves over strongly varying bottom topography

Speaker: 

Professor John Grue

Institution: 

University of Oslo, Norway

Time: 

Tuesday, November 27, 2007 - 2:00pm

Location: 

MSTB 254

A fully nonlinear time-stepping model for water wave motion over strongly varying topography
in three dimensions is presented. The modl is fully dispersive, fully nonlinear and, and also very rapid. The kinematic and dynamic boundary
condition at the free surface are used to derive the prognostic equations. Conservation of mass yields two integral equations for the normal velocity at the free surface and the wave potential at the sea floor. These are inverted analytically be means of Fourier transform. Various levels of nonlinearity of the equations are derived. A highly efficient computational scheme is obtained by the FFT-part of the formulation. Computations exemplify how a very long tsunami with leading depression running into very shallow water develop very short waves, that in the beginning are linear, developing then into a train of solitary waves of
large amplitude. Numerical examples on the formation of very strong ocean surface waves - rogue waves - are given.

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