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4:00pm to 4:50pm - RH 306 - Applied and Computational Mathematics Tong Wu - (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) On the Subsample Size of Quantile-Based Randomized Kaczmarz: Theory and Streaming Extensions This seminar surveys two recent developments in quantile-based randomized Kaczmarz (QRK) for corrupted linear systems. We begin with the QRK framework of [SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl., 43(2), 605–637], which efficiently solves systems of the form A x* + ε = b when the corruption vector ε is (βm)-sparse. A central question in this line of work is how many samples are actually needed to estimate the quantile used in each QRK update. The first part of the talk presents the subsampling theory in [SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl., 2025, to appear]: instead of using all m residuals, one may compute the quantile from only D uniformly sampled entries, and linear convergence over the first T iterations still holds with high probability provided D ≥ (C log T) / log(1/β). Moreover, this order is sharp up to constants, since if D ≤ (c log T) / log(1/β), then the T-th iterate can remain arbitrarily inaccurate with high probability. The second part of the seminar discusses a follow-up direction motivated by this result. While the subsampling theorem identifies the optimal order D = O( (log T) / log(1/β) ) when β = O(1), it leaves open how to make the constants explicit, how large the admissible corruption level β can be, and how small the subsample size D can be while still retaining guarantees. We therefore turn to streaming linear systems with Massart noise, where QRK is implemented using an optimal O(log T) batch size per update. The goal is to understand how the finite-subsample perspective extends to the online setting and how it leads to more explicit quantitative guarantees for robust streaming regression. |
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1:00pm to 2:00pm - RH 340N - Dynamical Systems Victor Kleptsyn - (CNRS, University of Rennes 1, France) Sums and intersections of Cantor sets — and some applications of the theory Abstract: This is a general introductory talk to the theory of sums and (stable) intersections of Cantor sets: the notion of thickness, Newhouse gap lemma, and a subset of Hall's ray in Lagrange/Markov spectra as an application to the number theory. |
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3:00pm to 3:50pm - RH 440 R - Logic Set Theory Julian Eshkol - (UC Irvine) Weakly Threading ideals on Successor Cardinals Complete ineffability is a classical topic in Set Theory, much of it due to Baumgartner. A cardinal kappa being completely ineffable implies that kappa is inaccessible. Work of Eshkol, Foreman and Magidor has shown that ineffability is equivalent to the existence of certain threading ideals. This talk describes a new kind of ideal: weakly threading ideals, and how to show that it is consistent that they exist on successor cardinals such as aleph_2 assuming the consistency of a measurable cardinal. |
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4:00pm to 5:00pm - 306 Rowland Hall - Differential Geometry Kai-Wei Zhao - (UCI) Classification of Ancient Finite-Entropy Curve Shortening Flows The classification of ancient solutions of CSF under some geometric conditions is a parabolic version of Liouville-type theorem. We will present that any ancient smooth embedded finite-entropy curve shortening flow is one of the following: a static line, a shrinking circle, a paper clip, a translating grim reaper, or a graphical ancient trombone constructed by Angenent-You. In particular, our result implies that any compact ancient smooth embedded finite-entropy flow is convex. Moreover, any non-compact ancient smooth embedded finite-entropy flow is either a static line or a complete graph over a fixed open interval. This is based on the joint work with Kyeongsu Choi, Dong-Hwi Seo, and Wei-Bo Su. |
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4:00pm to 5:00pm - NS2 1201 - Colloquium Lingrui Ge - (Peking University) The Robust Ten Martini Problem We will review the fascinating history of the classical ten martini problem and then briefly introduce a new scheme towards the study of spectral theory of analytic quasiperiodic Schrodinger operators. The basic objects include the connection between the dual Lyapunov exponents and Avila’s global theory, the partially hyperbolic structure of the dual long-range operators and the intrinsic symplectic structure of the dual center which is robust under trigonometric polynomial approximations. We will show how these enter into the solution of the robust ten martini problem. This is based on several joint works with Svetlana Jitomirskaya, Jiangong You, and Qi Zhou. |
