College of Arts and Science Vanderbilt University
Vanderbilt Univeristy College of Arts and Science

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January 18, 2013 4:00 pm (Friday)

Special Colloquium

Location: Stevenson 1206

Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

January 15, 2013 4:00 pm (Tuesday)

Special Colloquium

Location: Stevenson 1206

Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

January 10, 2013 4:30 pm (Thursday)

Special Colloquium

Location: Stevenson 5211

Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

January 8, 2013 4:00 pm (Tuesday)

Special Colloquium

Location: Stevenson 1206

Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

December 6, 2012 4:10 pm (Thursday)

Scalable Frames

Kasso A. Okoudjou, University of Maryland
Location: Stevenson 5211

Frames provide a mathematical framework for stably representing signals as linear combinations of basic building blocks that constitute an overcomplete collection. Finite frames are frames for finite dimensional spaces, and are especially suited for many applications in signal processing. The inherent redundancy of frames can be exploited to build compression and transmission algorithms that are resilient not only to lost of information but also to noise. For instance, tight frames constitute a particular class of frames that play important roles in many applications. After giving an overview of finite frame theory, I will consider the question of modifying a general frame to generate a tight frame by rescaling its frame vectors. A frame that positively answers this question will be called scalable. I will give various characterizations of the set of scalable frames, and present some topological descriptions of this set. (This talk is based on joint work with G. Kutyniok, F. Philipp and E. Tuley). Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

December 5, 2012 4:10 pm (Wednesday)

Poisson Boundaries, Harmonic Functions and Random Walks on Groups (continued)

Darren Creutz, Vanderbilt University
Location: Stevenson 1432

I will present the construction of the Poisson Boundary of a group, originally defined by Furstenberg, and explain its various properties and applications. The Poisson Boundary can be thought of as the exit boundary of a random walk on the group and can be identified with the space of harmonic functions on the group. The first talk will focus on the construction of the Poisson Boundary and various results due primarily to Furstenberg and Zimmer about boundaries. The second talk will focus on the dynamical behavior of the boundary and its applications to ergodic theory.

December 5, 2012 1:30 pm (Wednesday)

Graduate Student Tea

Location: Stevenson 1425

November 30, 2012 4:10 pm (Friday)

On the Einstein Equations for Relativistic Fluids

Marcelo Disconzi, Vanderbilt University
Location: Stevenson 1307

The Einstein equations have been a source of many interesting problems in Physics, Analysis and Geometry. Despite the great deal of work which has been devoted to them, with many success stories, several important questions remain open. One of the them is a satisfactory theory of isolated systems, such as stars, both from a perspective of the time development of the space-time, as well as from the point of view of the geometry induced on a space-like three surface. This talk will focus on the former situation. More specifically, we shall discuss relativistic fluids with and without viscosity, and prove a well-posedness result for the Cauchy problem. The viscous case, in particular, is of significant interest in light of recent developments in astrophysics.

November 29, 2012 4:10 pm (Thursday)

Nonassociative Ramsey Theory and the Amenability Problem for Thompson's Group

Justin Tatch Moore, Cornell University
Location: Stevenson 5211

In 1973, Richard Thompson considered the question of whether his newly defined group $F$ was amenable. The motivation for this problem stemed from his observation --- later rediscovered by Brin and Squire --- that $F$ did not contain a free group on two generators, thus making it a candidate for a counterexample to the von Neumann-Day problem. While the von Neumann-Day problem was solved by Ol'shanskii in the class of finitely generated groups and Ol'shanskii and Sapir in the class of finitely presented groups, the question of $F$'s amenability was sufficiently basic so as to become of interest in its own right. In this talk, I will analyze this problem from a Ramsey-theoretic perspective. In particular, the problem is related to generalizations of Ellis's Lemma and Hindman's Theorem to the setting of nonassociative binary systems. The amenability of $F$ is itself equivalent to the existence of certain finite Ramsey numbers. I will also discuss the growth rate of the F\olner function for $F$ (if it exists). Tea at 3:30 pm in SC 1425.

November 28, 2012 4:10 pm (Wednesday)

Bi-Lipschitz Embeddings of Groups

Alexander Ol'shanskii, Vanderbilt University
Location: Stevenson 1310

This is a joint work with Denis Osin. We show that every group $H$ of at most exponential growth with respect to some left invariant metric admits a bi-Lipschitz embedding into a finitely generated group $G$ such that $G$ is amenable (respectively, solvable, satisfies a non-trivial identity, elementary amenable, of finite decomposition complexity, etc.) whenever $H$ is. We will briefly discuss some applications to subgroup distortion, compression functions of Lipschitz embeddings into uniformly convex Banach spaces, F\o lner functions, and elementary classes of amenable groups.

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