Analysis and Probability Seminar

Welcome to Analysis and Probability Seminar at UF!

UPCOMING SEMINARS

FALL 2023

Location: LIT 368

Time: Fridays Period 9 (4:05- 4:55 p.m.)

Date Speaker Description
Sept. 8 Dr. Peter Bubenik Title: A Riesz-Markov-Kakutani representation theorem for metric spaces with a distinguished subset and relative optimal transport

I will introduce a setting for analysis arising in topological data analysis – one has a metric space in which there is a distinguished subset. There is a natural class of measures in this setting that are almost Radon measures – they are locally finite away from the distinguished subset, but only weakly locally finite at the subset. There is also a nice generalization of optimal transportation – the distinguished subset acts as a reservoir from which one may borrow or to which one may displace mass. I will show that these two topics are beautifully connected by a variant of the Riesz-Markov-Kakutani representation theorem.
This is joint work with Alex Elchesen.

Sept. 22 Dr. Michael Jury Title: Toeplitz determinants and multi-Toeplitz determinants

Abstract: I will review some of the classical results about Toeplitz matrices and determinants (including Szego’s theorems and eigenvalue distributions) and investigate the analogous questions for so-called “multi-Toeplitz” matrices and determinants (which I will define). We will prove the existence of limiting eigenvalue distributions in the multi-Toeplitz setting and pose some open problems.

Oct. 13 Abdulmajeed Alqasem Title:
Small deviation inequalities for log-concave distributions.

Abstract:
We motivate the definition of log-concave distributions starting from the Brunn-Minkowski inequality. We discuss some of the nice properties this class of distributions has. We show new results about discrete log-concave random variables and prove a conjecture by Feige for this class of random variables. We conclude with some open questions.

Oct. 27 Dr. Ugur G Abdulla Title: Classification of Singularities for the Elliptic and Parabolic PDEs and its Measure-theoretical, Topological and Probabilistic Consequences.

Abstract: The major problem in the Analysis of PDEs is understanding the nature of singularities of solutions to the PDEs reflecting the natural phenomena. In this talk, I will present new criteria for the removability of the fundamental singularity for the elliptic and parabolic PDEs. The criteria characterize the uniqueness of boundary value problems with singular data, reveal the nature of the harmonic or parabolic measure of the singularity point, asymptotic laws for the conditional Markov processes, and criteria for thinness in minimal- fine topology. The talk will be oriented to a general audience including non-expert faculty and graduate students.

Nov. 3 Michael Coopman Title: Determinantal Point Processes

Abstract: This will be a small survey of determinantal point processes (DPPs). After defining these processes and some classical results, I will talk about where DPPs occur in various fields and the context in which people study them.

Nov. 17 Kenneth DeMason Title: On the Shape of Low-Energy Planar Clusters

Abstract: Several commonly observed physical and biological systems are arranged in shapes that closely resemble a tessellation of the plane by regular hexagons (honeycomb cluster). Although these shapes are not always the direct product of energy minimization, they can still be understood, at least phenomenologically, as low-energy configurations. In this talk, explicit quantitative estimates on the geometry of every such low-energy planar cluster are provided, showing in particular that the vast majority of the chambers of such clusters must be generalized polygons with six edges, and closely resemble regular hexagons. Part of our argument is a detailed revision of the estimates behind the global isoperimetric principle for honeycomb clusters due to Hales. This talk is based on joint work with M. Caroccia and F. Maggi.