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Mon, 29. Apr at 13:00
Rudower Chaussee ...
Around the plasticity problem
Tue, 30. Apr at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Projective structures on Riemann surfaces and metrics on the moduli space of curves
Abstract. I will describe some recent results on projective structures on Riemann surfaces. After recalling some basic definitions I will explain a correspondence between varying projective structures over the moduli space of curves and (1,1)-forms over it. I will describe explicitely the correspondence in two examples: the projective structure coming from uniformization and a projective structure coming from Hodge theory. Finally I will also describe a new projective structure obtain from the line bundle \( 2 \Theta\).
Wed, 01. May
Labour Day
Thu, 02. May at 15:00
The Complexity of Constraint Satisfaction with Semilinear Constraints
Abstract. The linear program feasibility problem is a well-studied example of a constraint satisfaction problem that can be solved in polynomial time. For some other CSPs over numeric domains, the computational complexity is wide open, such as satisfiability of max-plus systems. In this talk I will give a survey on what is known about the border of polynomial-time tractability and NP-hardness for the large class of CSPs where all the allowed constraints come from some fixed set of semilinear relations, i.e., relations that are definable over the rationals with addition and the order.
Fri, 03. May at 14:15
@FU (T9)
A new lower bound for sphere packing
Tue, 07. May at 13:00
Tue, 07. May at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Infinitesimal rigidity of certain modular morphisms
Abstract. The Torelli morphism maps (the isomorphism class of) a smooth complex projective curve to its polarized jacobian variety. It has been recently proved by Farb that this is the only non-constant holomorphic map from the moduli space of curves to that of principally polarized abelian varieties, and Serván has recently proved a similar result for the Prym morphism. These result can be interpreted by saying that a certain moduli space of morphisms consists of just one point, and it is natural to ask whether this point is reduced. In this talk I will present a joint work with Giulio Codogni and Sara Torelli, where we show that this is indeed the case (in the setting of moduli stacks): These morphisms do not admit non-trivial infinitesimal deformations. The proof uses the Fujita decomposition of the Hodge bundle of a family of curves, and can be applied to other morphisms involving moduli of smooth curves.
Wed, 08. May at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 08. May at 11:30
online
Solving the Optimal Experiment Design Problem with mixed-integer convex methods
Wed, 08. May at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Gradient flow solutions for porous medium equations with nonlocal Lévy-type pressure
Abstract
Wed, 08. May at 16:30
EN 058
Polyhedra in information theory
Abstract. A central object in information theory is the entropy region. Its closure in the euclidean topology is a convex cone and the elements of its dual cone are known as ''linear information inequalities''. They form a large portion of the arsenal of information theorists for solving channel capacity problems. In this talk, I will survey techniques for finding new information inequalities via so-called extension properties and conditional information inequalities. All of these techniques are secretly powered by polyhedra geometry. Hence, they can be implemented, automated and freely combined using the common language of linear programming. My vision is that information inequalities will be stored and thoroughly catalogued as discrete geometric objects.
Thu, 09. May
Ascension Day
Wed, 15. May at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Non-isothermal phase-field models for tumor growth
Abstract
Wed, 15. May at 16:30
EN 058
Thu, 16. May at 15:00
Smoothed analysis of deterministic discounted and mean-payoff games
Abstract. Deterministic turn-based discounted and mean-payoff games are fundamental classes of games with an unsettled complexity. They belong to the complexity classes NP and coNP, but are not known to be polynomial-time solvable. Furthermore, they are at the bottom of a hierarchy of complexity classes that stratifies the NP search problems. Despite these properties, the problem of solving turn-based games efficiently has been open for 35 years. Nevertheless, even though we do not know how to solve these games in polynomial time in the worst case, practical experiments suggest that solving random games is easy. More precisely, the policy iteration methods, which can take exponentially many steps in the worst case, converge quickly to the solution when the weights of the game are taken at random. The aim of my talk is to give an explanation of this phenomenon using the framework of "smoothed analysis" introduced by Spielman and Teng to explain the real-world efficiency of the simplex method. We prove that if the weights of a turn-based deterministic game are perturbed by a Gaussian noise, then the resulting randomized problem can be solved efficiently by a variant of a policy iteration method. This talk is based on a joint work with Bruno Loff.
Thu, 16. May at 15:15
Rudower Chaussee ...
Mon, 20. May
Whit Monday
Tue, 21. May at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 22. May at 11:30
online
What is a spacetime and what is it good for?
Wed, 22. May at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Necessary and sufficient optimality conditions in the sparse optimal control of singular Allen--Cahn systems with dynamic boundary conditions
Fri, 24. May at 14:30
Neues Palais
Exploring Stability in Geometric and Functional Inequalities
Abstract. In the realms of analysis and geometry, geometric and functional inequalities are of paramount significance, influencing a variety of problems. Traditionally, the focus has been on determining precise constants and identifying minimizers. More recently, there has been a growing interest in investigating the stability of these inequalities. The central question we aim to explore is: "If a function nearly achieves equality in a known functional inequality, can we demonstrate, in a quantitative way, its proximity to a minimizer?" In this talk I will overview this beautiful topic and discuss some recent results.
Tue, 28. May at 13:00
Tue, 28. May at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 29. May at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 29. May at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Thu, 30. May at 15:00
Fri, 31. May at 14:15
@TU (EW 201)
Wed, 05. Jun at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 05. Jun at 11:30
online
Data-Adaptive Discretization of Inverse Problems
Wed, 05. Jun at 16:30
EN 058
Wed, 05. Jun at 16:30
EN 058
Tue, 11. Jun at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 12. Jun at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 12. Jun at 16:30
EN 058
Fri, 14. Jun at 14:15
@TU (EW 201)
Wed, 19. Jun at 11:30
online
A Soft-Correspondence Approach to Shape Analysis
Wed, 19. Jun at 16:30
EN 058
Tue, 25. Jun at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 26. Jun at 10:00
R. 3.13 im HVP 11a
Wed, 26. Jun at 16:30
EN 058
Thu, 27. Jun at 15:00
Fri, 28. Jun at 14:15
@ZIB
Tue, 02. Jul at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 03. Jul at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 03. Jul at 11:30
online
Wasserstein Gradient Flows for Generalised Transport in Bayesian Inversion
Thu, 04. Jul at 15:00
Fri, 05. Jul at 14:15
@HU (ESZ)
Richard von Mises Lecture
Wed, 10. Jul at 10:00
WIAS Erhard-Schmi...
Wed, 10. Jul at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...
Variational Gaussian approximation for quantum dynamics
Abstract
Thu, 11. Jul at 15:00
Tue, 16. Jul at 13:15
Room 3.006, Rudow...
Wed, 17. Jul at 11:30
online
Likelihood Geometry of Max-Linear Bayesian Networks
Thu, 18. Jul at 15:00
Wed, 24. Jul at 14:15
WIAS, Erhard-Schm...