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Mathematics Calendar

January 26, 2016
Tuesday, January 26
Noncommutative Geometry
Time: 11:30
Speaker: (Western)
Title: "Yang-Mills equations and (anti-) self duality"
Room: MC 107

Abstract: We shall explore consequences of (anti-) self-duality for solutions of Yang-Mills equations in dimension 4.

Homotopy Theory
Time: 13:30
Speaker: Mitchell Riley (Western)
Title: "Homotopy n-Types (part 1)"
Room: MC 107

Abstract: Following Chapter 7 of the HoTT Book, I will present some basic properties of Homotopy n-Types.

Geometry and Topology
Time: 14:30
Speaker: Spiro Karigiannis (Waterloo)
Title: "Partial classification of twisted austere 3-folds"
Room: MC 107

Abstract: Calibrated submanifolds are special kinds of minimal submanifolds (vanishing mean curvature) that are defined by first order conditions on the immersion. The most studied examples are complex submanifolds of Kahler manifolds, special Lagrangian submanifolds in Calabi-Yau manifolds, and certain special types of submanifolds in $G2$ and $Spin(7)$ manifolds. By imposing a certain amount of symmetry, one can sometimes reduce the nonlinear elliptic first order equations defining such submanifolds to simpler equations on lower-dimensional manifolds. For example, a result of Harvey-Lawson is that the conormal bundle of an austere submanifold of $\mathbb{R}^n$ is special Lagrangian in $\mathbb{C}^n$. This "bundle construction" was generalized in 2004 by Ionel-Karigiannis-Min-Oo to other calibrations, and then extended in 2012 by Karigiannis-Leung to a "twisted" version. Thus, in particular, we obtain many more examples of special Lagrangian submanifolds of $\mathbb{C}^n$ by considering "twisted austere submanifolds" of $\mathbb{R}^n$. I will describe these constructions and review the earlier results. Then I will state several theorems that give a partial classification of twisted austere submanifolds of dimension 3. These new theorems are joint work with Tom Ivey at Charleston College.

Analysis Seminar
Time: 15:30
Speaker: Debraj Chakrabarti (Central Michigan University)
Title: "$L^2$- Dolbeault cohomology of annuli"
Room: MC 107

Abstract: By an annulus we mean a domain in $\mathbb{C}^n$ obtained by removing a compact set from a pseudoconvex domain. We study when the $L^2$ $\overline\partial$ operator has closed range from functions to $(0,1)$-forms. In particular, we show that the Chinese Coin problem, i.e. to prove $L^2$-estimates on a domain in $\mathbb{C}^2$ obtained by removing a bidisc from a ball, has a positive solution.

Pizza Seminar
Time: 17:30
Speaker: Matthias Franz (Western)
Title: "Numbers"
Room: MC 108

Abstract: The natural numbers are the first thing one learns in mathematics. Because they lack some desirable properties, one soon extends them to the integers, the rational, real and complex numbers. In this talk I want to focus on other numbers systems that are less often encountered in undergraduate mathematics courses, for instance $p$-adic numbers, quaternions, octonions and cardinal numbers.