Tidligere arrangementer - Side 115
Andreas K??b, Professor, Department of Geosciences, UiO
Professor Trond H. Torsvik, Director Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED), University of Oslo
CEES Extra seminar by David Sloan Wilson
Martin Jullum (Department of Mathematics, UiO), gives a seminar in Auditorium 4, Vilhelm Bjerknes house, at 14:15, Tuesday March 4th:
Parametric or Nonparametric: The Focused Information Criterion Approach
Jan Martin Nordbotten (University of Bergen) will give a talk about
Finite volume methods for elasticity and poro-elasticity
Abstract: We introduce a new class of cell-centered finite volume methods for elasticity and poro-elasticity. This class of discretization methods has the advantage that the mechanical discretization is fully compatible (in terms of grid and variables) to the standard cell-centered finite volume discretizations that are prevailing for commercial simulation of multi-phase flows in porous media.
For a specific variant of the proposed discretization, we give an overview of a convergence proof in the setting of isotropic elasticity, and address from a theoretical perspective the issues of a discrete Korn's inequality and robustness with respect to locking. Furthermore, we give numerical results for both structured and unstructured grids for both elasticity and poro-elasticity. The talk concludes with an application to simulation of fractured and fracturing porous media.
Risk measures are set to quantify in terms of assets/money the amount of financial risk associated to a certain financial position. The purposes for such evaluations are many and interesting both from the investors perspectives and regulators. As example, these evaluations are important to quantify the amount of reserve that financial institutions, such as banks or insurance companies, have to set aside as hedging guarantee. In the recent years large attention is given towards convex and coherent risk measures.
A series of 10 lectures will be held by Prof. Giacomo Scandolo, Department of Mathematics, University of Verona (Italy), visiting scholar at our department.
The course is suggested to Master and PhD students in the area of Stochastic Analysis, Insurance, and Risk as well as practitioners in the area.
Friday seminar by Anna G?rdmark
CEES Extra seminar by Ana Gouveia
Torstein Nilssen (Universitetet i Oslo) holder et seminar med tittelen: Malliavin differentiability for a class of SDE's in Hilbert spaces.
A continuation of the previous talk.
Seminar by Dr. Fabrice Anizon, Clermont Université, Université Blaise Pascal, Institut de Chimie de Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Magnus Landstad will give a talk with title: Quantum groups from almost matched pairs of groups - the groupoid approach
Abstract: If G is a locally compact group with two closed subgroups H,K s.t. G=HK, then (H,K) is called a matched pair of subgroups. The construction of a quantum group from such a pair goes back a long time. We shall look at the more general case where the subgroups are almost matched (the complement of HK in G has measure 0), then a groupoid approach to the construction is very useful and many formulas are obtained for free.
I shall start with explaining the concepts needed (quantum groups, groupoids, etc) and then how the groupoid is constructed. Finally we shall look at the special case where G has a compact open subgroup.
This is joint work with A. Van Daele.
Dongho Chae (Chung-Ang University, Korea) will give a seminar talk entitled
On the self-similar blow-up for the compressible Euler equations
Abstract: The problem of ?nite time blow-up/global regularity of the 3D incompressible Euler equations is an outstanding problem in mathematical ?uid mechanics. On the other hand, the scenario of self-similar type blow-up is a natural candidate of blow-ups in various nonlinear partial differential equations such as the porous medium equation and the nonlinear Schr?dinger equations. We also mention that for the closely related incompressible Navier-Stokes equations the question of self-similar blow-up was raised by J. Leray in 1930, and was negatively answered by J. Necas, M. Ruzicka and V. Sverak in 1996. In this talk we present the progress of study during the last several years on the self-similar blow-up for the Euler equations.
Friday seminar by Gilles Guillot
Johanna Ridder (University of Oslo) will give a talk about
Analysis of a finite difference method for two-dimensional incompressible magnetohydrodynamics
Abstract: We consider the magnetohydrodynamics equations for a viscous incompressible resistive fluid in two dimensions. For these equations we analyse a semi-discrete finite difference scheme that is based on a staggered grid and is energy preserving. We show an a priori H^1-bound and the convergence of the scheme.
Emily Freeland, postdoc at OCK/Stockholm University.
Professor B. Rajeev (India Statistical Institute, Bangalore) holder et seminar med tittelen: The Monotonicity Inequality on Hermite-Sobolev spaces.
Veileder du studenter? Synes du ansvaret er overveldende? Vet du hvordan du skal unng? problemer, eller l?se dem hvis de oppst?r?
In 1980 R. W. Thomason published a proof that CAT, the category of small categories, is a proper closed model category that is Quillen equivalent to SSet, the category of simplicial sets, with the standard model structure defined by Quillen. D-C Cisinski has since corrected the proof of left properness by replacing the central term of Dwyer morphism - a class of morphisms that Thomason believed to be the cofibrations - with a rough analogue in CAT of the NDR-pairs. The cofibrations, then, which are all retracts of Dwyer morphisms, are really the NDR-pair analogues. I will go through the main parts of Thomason's argument, incorporating Cisinski's adjustment, point out Thomason's mistake and here and there use more recent terminology from M. Hovey's book Model Categories. Towards the end I'll compare Thomason's method with modern, standardized ways of confirming a cofibrantly generated (closed) model structure, like the necessary and sufficient conditions listed in Hovey's Model Categories (thm. 2.1.19) and transferring a model structure across an adjunction by using Kan's lemma on transfer and similar results
Friday seminar by Bart Pollux
Nils Chr. Stenseth, Professor of Ecology and Evolution at Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo
Antoine Julien (NTNU) will give a talk with title: Tiling spaces, groupoids and K-theory
Abstract:
In this talk, I will describe how spaces, groupoids and C*-algebras can be associated with aperiodic tilings. In some cases, it is possible to describe the structure of the groupoid combinatorially in terms of augmented Bratteli diagrams. (joint work with Jean Savinien) Time permitting, I will expose a strategy for computing the K-theory of the tiling algebra in terms of the K-theory of AF-algebras (work in progress).
Friday seminar by Jakob Hemmer Hansen
Shahin Jafarzadeh, Post-Doctoral Researcher, ITA
David Ruiz Ba?os (University of Oslo) holder et seminar med tittelen: On the regularity of densities of SDE's. A classical solution to the stochastic transport equation