This page list all events and seminars that take place in the department this week. Please use the form below to choose a different week or date range.

OA/OT Seminar

TBA

Dec 31, 11:00—12:00, 2019, -101

Speaker

Baruch Solel (Technion)

Abstract

TBA

Colloquium

Flavors of bicycle mathematics

Dec 31, 14:30—15:30, 2019, Math -101

Speaker

Sergei Tabachnikov (Penn State University)

Abstract

This talk concerns a naive model of bicycle motion: a bicycle is a segment of fixed length that can move so that the velocity of the rear end is always aligned with the segment. Surprisingly, this simple model is quite rich and has connections with several areas of research, including completely integrable systems. Here is a sampler of problems that I hope to touch upon:

1) The trajectory of the front wheel and the initial position of the bicycle uniquely determine its motion and its terminal position; the monodromy map sending the initial position to the terminal one arises. This mapping is a Moebius transformation, a remarkable fact that has various geometrical and dynamical consequences.

2) The rear wheel track and a choice of the direction of motion uniquely determine the front wheel track; changing the direction to the opposite, yields another front track. These two front tracks are related by the bicycle (Backlund, Darboux) correspondence, which defines a discrete time dynamical system on the space of curves. This system is completely integrable and it is closely related with another, well studied, completely integrable dynamical system, the filament (a.k.a binormal, smoke ring, local induction) equation.

3) Given the rear and front tracks of a bicycle, can one tell which way the bicycle went? Usually, one can, but sometimes one cannot. The description of these ambiguous tire tracks is an open problem, intimately related with Ulam’s problem in flotation theory (in dimension two): is the round ball the only body that floats in equilibrium in all positions? This problem is also related to the motion of a charge in a magnetic field of a special kind. It turns out that the known solutions are solitons of the planar version of the filament equation.

AGNT

Monogenic cubic fields and local obstructions

Jan 1, 15:00—16:15, 2020, -101

Speaker

Ari Shnidman (HUJI)

Abstract

A number field is monogenic if its ring of integers is generated by a single element. It is conjectured that 0% of degree d number fields are monogenic (for any d > 2). There are local obstructions that force this proportion to be < 100%, but beyond this very little is known. I’ll discuss work with Alpoge and Bhargava showing that a positive proportion of cubic fields (d = 3) have no local obstructions and yet are still not monogenic. This uses new results on integral points and ranks of Selmer groups of elliptic curves in twist families.

BGU Probability and Ergodic Theory (PET) seminar

Cutoff on graphs and the Sarnak-Xue density of eigenvalues

Jan 2, 11:10—12:00, 2020, -101

Speaker

Amitay Kamber (The Hebrew University)

Abstract

The cutoff phenomenon of random walks on graphs is conjectured to be very common. However, it is unknown whether many natural examples of large graphs of fixed degree satisfy this phenomenon. It was recently shown by Lubetzky and Peres that Ramanujan graphs, i.e., graphs with the optimal spectrum, exhibit cutoff of the simple random walk in optimal time. We show that the spectral condition can be replaced by a weaker spectral condition, based on the work of Sarnak and Xue in automorphic forms. This property is also equivalent to a geometrical path counting property, which can be verified in some cases. As an example, we show that the theorems hold for some families of Schreier graphs of the $SL_2(F_p)$ action on the projective line, for a finite field $F_p$. Based on joint work with Konstantin Golubev.


Other Dates