Tidligere arrangementer - Side 45
In 80s Weibel observed that K-theory is homotopy invariant on Fp-schemes up to p-torsion. His main tool was the action of the ring Witt vectors on nil-K-groups: NKi(R) = Ker(Ki(R[t]) → Ki(R)). We will revisit the proof and check that the same result holds for all finitary localizing invariants.
- Hva du ikke finner p? EIOPAs sider
- Matematisk Institutt ved professor emeritus Erik B?lviken tilbyr et to-dagers etterutdanningskurs i Solvency II.
Welcome to this seminar on China's role in Africa and Latin America.
Welcome to the next seminar of the semester, where there will be a light lunch and talk by Dr. Pablo Vargas (Institut Necker Enfants-Malades, Faculté de Médecine Necker,Paris, France).
Stephen Hladky presents work in collaboration with Margery A. Barrand (both Department of Pharmacology, University of Cambridge).
Abstract: Extravascular fluxes of marker substances and some wastes are sufficiently fast that there is almost certain to be a component of flow augmenting their diffusion in the parenchyma. There have been two major proposals for how this flow is produced and where it is important. The evidence for the classical and glymphatic hypotheses will be reviewed. Extravascular, and in particular perivascular, routes for fluid movement out of the parenchyma to lymphatics may be important in the development of hydrocephalus.
Benjamin Keller, Department of Physics and Materials Science, University of Memphis.
Professor Tor Iversen fyller 70 ?r denne h?sten. Vi inviterer til et seminar for ? feire Tor sitt omfattende bidrag til helse?konomisk forskning og undervisning.
I will explain how motivic homotopy theory can be used to attack problems regarding finite projective modules over smooth affine k-algebras. I will recall in particular the foundational theorem of Morel and Asok-Hoyois-Wendt, and the construction of the Barge-Morel Euler class. Time permitting, I will explain recent progress on Murthy's splitting conjecture.
C*-algebra seminar talk by Marco Matassa (OsloMet)
Dr. Douglas Rowland, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Financial risk arising from the increasing of life expectancy. This is all in a nutshell. To know more, come to the lecture: forecasting, modelling, quantification.
Dr. Katie Overy, senior lecturer at University of Edinburgh, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series.
We combine a systematic approach for deriving general a posteriori
error estimates for convex minimization problems using convex duality relations with a recently derived generalized Marini formula. The resulting a posteriori error estimates are essentially constant-free and apply to a large class of variational problems including the p-Dirichlet problem, as well as degenerate minimization, obstacle and image de-noising problems.
For the p-Dirichlet problem, the a posteriori error bounds are equivalent to the classical residual type a posteriori error bounds and, hence, reliable and efficient.
By Kristian Ebbesen Hangh?j from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Can Artificial Intelligence (AI) provide solutions to multiple challenges of our time? And what is the future of work in the AI era?
Saghir Bashir, ilustat & Centre of Statistics and its Applications (CEAUL), Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisbon.
Abstract (PDF)
Sustainable cancer care using molecular tests - from a prostate cancer perspective
Welcome to the first seminar of the semester, where there will be a light lunch and talks Dr. Pooja Kumari (Ciosk group) and Alexandre Gidon (Progida group).
José Carlos Nieto Borge is a marine physicist and associate professor at the Universidad de Alcalá de Henares, Spain.
Daniel Herman, PhD student at Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Oslo.
Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz, Astronomy & Astrophysics Department, University of California, Santa Cruz