Week of March 15, 2026

Tue Mar 17, 2026
4:00pm to 5:00pm - 306 Rowland Hall - Differential Geometry
Tang-Kai Lee - (Columbia University)
Uniqueness of mean curvature flow evolution

The smooth mean curvature flow often develops singularities, making weak solutions essential for extending the flow beyond singular times, as well as having applications for geometry and topology. Among various weak formulations, the level set flow method is notable for ensuring long-time existence and uniqueness. However, this comes at the cost of potential fattening, which reflects genuine non-uniqueness of the flow after singular times. Even for flows starting from smooth, embedded, closed initial data, such non-uniqueness can occur. Thus, we can't expect genuine uniqueness in general. Addressing this non-uniqueness issue is a difficult problem. With Alec Payne, we establish an intersection principle comparing two intersecting flows. We prove that level set flows satisfy this principle in the absence of non-uniqueness.

 

Thu Mar 19, 2026
11:00am - 306 Rowland Hall - Harmonic Analysis
Melissa Tacy - (The University of Auckland)
The Principle of Simultaneous Saturation

On $[-1,1]$ which of the functions $f(x)=10e^{-100\pi x^{2}}$ or $g(x)=\sin(100\pi x)$ is larger? The answer depends on how you measure size, $|f|$ achieves a higher peak value than $|g|$, but the average of $|g|$ is the larger of the two.

 

To capture these competing notions of size, we typically use families of norms, such as the $L^{p}$ norms, which interpolate between “height” and “spread.” A natural question then arises: if we know a supremum bound for a class of functions, at how many points can a function from that class achieve this supremum? The Gaussian $f$ spikes sharply at $x=0$ and decays rapidly elsewhere, while $g$ is periodic and achieves its supremum at many points (but the values of $|g|$ at those points are much smaller than what $f$ achieves at $x=0$). We say that a function $f$ saturates a supremum bound if it achieves the bound at at least one point and it simultaneously saturates the supremum bound at $x$ and $y$ if both $|f(x)|$ and $|f(y)|$ achieve the supremum. How can we constrain the number of simultaneously saturating points?  

 

A very simple observation is that if both $|f(x)|$ and $|f(y)|$ are large, then so is $|f(x)f(y)|$. In this talk I will ``pull the thread'' on this observation and arrive at a very general technique for controlling the number of large values that a function can take. As an application I will demonstrate how to use the technique to prove $L^{p}$ estimates for multilinear restriction operators.