Events of the Week

Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
February 2
Integrability and Beyond

The (random) matrix

Guido Mazzuca - Tulane University
TBA 3:00 PM
"Red or blue pill?" Ioana asked the graduate student.
"What happens if I take the blue one?"
"Nothing," Alan replied. "The story ends. We will know that you are not curious enough, or that you think that finding the energy levels for charged atoms is not an important quest for physics."
"Or that you do not believe in the power of probability theory, only in the crude Riemann-Hilbert method," Ioana pressed.
The student was a bit perplexed: he hated RHP, but at the same time, their quest looked impossible without it. "So if I take the red one? What is going to happen?"
"Well," said Ioana, smiling, "you will start an amazing journey. You will uncover a world of beauty and possibility. We start with the simplest possible situation: we consider a symmetric random matrix with Gaussian entries and we will compute the joint probability density function of the eigenvalues explicitly. During this journey, we will learn how to tridiagonalize a matrix, how to use recurrence relations to express the Vandermonde determinant, and much more."
Alan stood up. "And the best of all? It is going to be a symphony where all the players play their part flawlessly."
The grad took the red pill and ate it. "Well, let's get started!"

Reference: "Matrix Models for Beta Ensembles" Ioana Dumitriu, Alan Edelman https://arxiv.org/abs/math-ph/0206043
February 3
Graduate Student Colloquium

Riesz-Type Sums Involving Real Quadratic $L$-Values

Tushar Karmakar - Tulane University
Dinwiddie Hall 102 2:45 PM
In analytic number theory, summation formulas are often useful for understanding the properties of sequences which grow erratically. We explore Riesz type sums involving class number of real quadratic field. In particular, we extend recent work of Beckwith, Diamantis, Gupta, Rolen, and Thalagoda from harmonic Maass forms to sesquiharmonic Maass forms of weight $1/2$. Our approach adapts a method of Chandrasekharan and Narasimhan, which we apply to a sesquiharmonic Maass form first introduced by Duke, Imamo{\u g}lu, and T\'{o}th. (This is ongoing joint work with Professor Olivia Beckwith)
February 4
Algebra and Combinatorics

An algebraic theory of Lojasiewicz exponents.

Tai Ha - Tulane University
Gibson Hall 126 3:00 PM
We develop a unified algebraic and valuative theory of Lojasiewicz exponents for pairs of graded families of ideals. Within this framework, analytic local Lojasiewicz exponents, gradient exponents, and exponents at infinity are all realized as asymptotic containment thresholds between appropriate filtrations.

The main theme is a finite-max principle: under verifiable algebraic hypothesis, the a priori infinite valuative supremum describing the Lojasiewicz exponent reduces to a finite maximum and attained by divisorial valuations. We identify two complementary mechanisms leading to this phenomenon: finite testing arising from normalized blowups and Rees algebra constructions, and attainment via compactness of normalized valuation spaces under linear boundedness assumptions. This finite-max principle yields strong structural consequences, including rigidity, stratification, and stability results. We also explain classical results/problems in toric and Newton polyhedral settings.
February 5
Geometry & Topology

Persistent Homology Learning Seminar (LSC)

Rafal Komendarczyk - Tulane University
Hebert 210 12:30 PM
We will continue our journey into the realm of persistence modules.

--------------------------
This learning seminar introduces the foundations of persistent homology, a key tool in topological data analysis for capturing multiscale topological features of general metric spaces. We will study persistence modules, barcodes, and distances such as the bottleneck and interleaving metrics, with a focus on their geometric meaning.

A central goal of the seminar is to understand and prove stability theorems for persistent homology, including bounds relating bottleneck distance to the Gromov–Hausdorff distance. Core examples will come from Morse theory and Vietoris–Rips filtrations of metric spaces.

The seminar is structured as a guided, collaborative reading course and is aimed at graduate students and faculty generally interested in this aspect of topology or geometry.

Colloquium

The prime number theorem in short intervals

Ayla Gafni - Ole Miss
Host: Olivia
MA-200B 3:30 PM
One form of the prime number theorem asserts that
\[\sum_{n\le x} \Lambda(n) = x(1 + o(1)),\]
where $\Lambda(n)$ is the von Mangoldt function. By the triangle inequality, this also gives
\[\sum_{x < n\le x+y} \Lambda(n) = y(1 + o(1)),\]
in the ``long interval'' setting $y\sim x$. It is expected that the prime number theorem holds for much shorter intervals, namely for $y\sim x^{\theta}$ for any fixed $\theta\in (0,1]$. From the recent zero density estimates of Guth and Maynard, this result is known for all $x$ when $\theta > \frac{17}{30} $ and for almost all $x$ when $\theta > \frac{2}{15}$. In this talk, we will discuss the connections between zero density estimates, the prime number theorem in short intervals, and the distribution of prime numbers. Further, we will present some quantitative upper bounds on the size of the exceptional set where the prime number theorem in short intervals fails. We give an explicit relation between zero density estimates and exceptional set bounds, allowing for the most recent zero density estimates to be directly applied to give upper bounds on the exceptional set via a small amount of computer assistance. This talk is based on joint work with Terence Tao.
February 6
no events
February 2 - February 6
February 2
Monday
Integrability and Beyond

The (random) matrix

Guido Mazzuca - Tulane University
TBA 3:00 PM
"Red or blue pill?" Ioana asked the graduate student.
"What happens if I take the blue one?"
"Nothing," Alan replied. "The story ends. We will know that you are not curious enough, or that you think that finding the energy levels for charged atoms is not an important quest for physics."
"Or that you do not believe in the power of probability theory, only in the crude Riemann-Hilbert method," Ioana pressed.
The student was a bit perplexed: he hated RHP, but at the same time, their quest looked impossible without it. "So if I take the red one? What is going to happen?"
"Well," said Ioana, smiling, "you will start an amazing journey. You will uncover a world of beauty and possibility. We start with the simplest possible situation: we consider a symmetric random matrix with Gaussian entries and we will compute the joint probability density function of the eigenvalues explicitly. During this journey, we will learn how to tridiagonalize a matrix, how to use recurrence relations to express the Vandermonde determinant, and much more."
Alan stood up. "And the best of all? It is going to be a symphony where all the players play their part flawlessly."
The grad took the red pill and ate it. "Well, let's get started!"

Reference: "Matrix Models for Beta Ensembles" Ioana Dumitriu, Alan Edelman https://arxiv.org/abs/math-ph/0206043
February 3
Tuesday
Graduate Student Colloquium

Riesz-Type Sums Involving Real Quadratic $L$-Values

Tushar Karmakar - Tulane University
Dinwiddie Hall 102 2:45 PM
In analytic number theory, summation formulas are often useful for understanding the properties of sequences which grow erratically. We explore Riesz type sums involving class number of real quadratic field. In particular, we extend recent work of Beckwith, Diamantis, Gupta, Rolen, and Thalagoda from harmonic Maass forms to sesquiharmonic Maass forms of weight $1/2$. Our approach adapts a method of Chandrasekharan and Narasimhan, which we apply to a sesquiharmonic Maass form first introduced by Duke, Imamo{\u g}lu, and T\'{o}th. (This is ongoing joint work with Professor Olivia Beckwith)
February 4
Wednesday
Algebra and Combinatorics

An algebraic theory of Lojasiewicz exponents.

Tai Ha - Tulane University
Gibson Hall 126 3:00 PM
We develop a unified algebraic and valuative theory of Lojasiewicz exponents for pairs of graded families of ideals. Within this framework, analytic local Lojasiewicz exponents, gradient exponents, and exponents at infinity are all realized as asymptotic containment thresholds between appropriate filtrations.

The main theme is a finite-max principle: under verifiable algebraic hypothesis, the a priori infinite valuative supremum describing the Lojasiewicz exponent reduces to a finite maximum and attained by divisorial valuations. We identify two complementary mechanisms leading to this phenomenon: finite testing arising from normalized blowups and Rees algebra constructions, and attainment via compactness of normalized valuation spaces under linear boundedness assumptions. This finite-max principle yields strong structural consequences, including rigidity, stratification, and stability results. We also explain classical results/problems in toric and Newton polyhedral settings.
February 5
Thursday
Geometry & Topology

Persistent Homology Learning Seminar (LSC)

Rafal Komendarczyk - Tulane University
Hebert 210 12:30 PM
We will continue our journey into the realm of persistence modules.

--------------------------
This learning seminar introduces the foundations of persistent homology, a key tool in topological data analysis for capturing multiscale topological features of general metric spaces. We will study persistence modules, barcodes, and distances such as the bottleneck and interleaving metrics, with a focus on their geometric meaning.

A central goal of the seminar is to understand and prove stability theorems for persistent homology, including bounds relating bottleneck distance to the Gromov–Hausdorff distance. Core examples will come from Morse theory and Vietoris–Rips filtrations of metric spaces.

The seminar is structured as a guided, collaborative reading course and is aimed at graduate students and faculty generally interested in this aspect of topology or geometry.

Colloquium

The prime number theorem in short intervals

Ayla Gafni - Ole Miss
Host: Olivia
MA-200B 3:30 PM
One form of the prime number theorem asserts that
\[\sum_{n\le x} \Lambda(n) = x(1 + o(1)),\]
where $\Lambda(n)$ is the von Mangoldt function. By the triangle inequality, this also gives
\[\sum_{x < n\le x+y} \Lambda(n) = y(1 + o(1)),\]
in the ``long interval'' setting $y\sim x$. It is expected that the prime number theorem holds for much shorter intervals, namely for $y\sim x^{\theta}$ for any fixed $\theta\in (0,1]$. From the recent zero density estimates of Guth and Maynard, this result is known for all $x$ when $\theta > \frac{17}{30} $ and for almost all $x$ when $\theta > \frac{2}{15}$. In this talk, we will discuss the connections between zero density estimates, the prime number theorem in short intervals, and the distribution of prime numbers. Further, we will present some quantitative upper bounds on the size of the exceptional set where the prime number theorem in short intervals fails. We give an explicit relation between zero density estimates and exceptional set bounds, allowing for the most recent zero density estimates to be directly applied to give upper bounds on the exceptional set via a small amount of computer assistance. This talk is based on joint work with Terence Tao.
February 6
Friday
no events
February 9
no events
February 10
no events
February 11
no events
February 12
no events
February 13
no events
February 9 - February 13
February 9
Monday
no events
February 10
Tuesday
no events
February 11
Wednesday
no events
February 12
Thursday
no events
February 13
Friday
no events
February 16
Holiday

Mardi Gras Holiday

No Classes
February 17
Holiday

Mardi Gras Holiday

No Classes
February 18
no events
February 19
no events
February 20
no events
February 16 - February 20
February 16
Monday
Holiday

Mardi Gras Holiday

No Classes
February 17
Tuesday
Holiday

Mardi Gras Holiday

No Classes
February 18
Wednesday
no events
February 19
Thursday
no events
February 20
Friday
no events
February 23
no events
February 24
no events
February 25
Algebra and Combinatorics

A necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in edge unfoldings of nearly flat convex caps.

Nicholas Barvinok - Smith College
Gibson Hall, room 126 3:00 PM
By cutting a 3D convex polyhedron by a plane, we obtain a convex cap. By cutting on a boundary rooted spanning forest of the edge graph, we can unfold the cap into the plane. Nearly flat caps have unfoldings which are very close to their orthogonal projections. We take advantage of this to construct a necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in the unfolding based on the orthogonal projection of the cap's edge graph. This is a recent result which is a joint work with Tyson Trauger. We also discuss two possible applications of this condition: a positive resolution to a special case of Durer's problem, and a necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in infinitesimal edge unfoldings of arbitrary convex caps.
February 26
Colloquium

TBA

Nancy Neudauer - Pacific University
Host: Mahir
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
February 27
no events
February 23 - February 27
February 23
Monday
no events
February 24
Tuesday
no events
February 25
Wednesday
Algebra and Combinatorics

A necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in edge unfoldings of nearly flat convex caps.

Nicholas Barvinok - Smith College
Gibson Hall, room 126 3:00 PM
By cutting a 3D convex polyhedron by a plane, we obtain a convex cap. By cutting on a boundary rooted spanning forest of the edge graph, we can unfold the cap into the plane. Nearly flat caps have unfoldings which are very close to their orthogonal projections. We take advantage of this to construct a necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in the unfolding based on the orthogonal projection of the cap's edge graph. This is a recent result which is a joint work with Tyson Trauger. We also discuss two possible applications of this condition: a positive resolution to a special case of Durer's problem, and a necessary and sufficient condition for detecting overlap in infinitesimal edge unfoldings of arbitrary convex caps.
February 26
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Nancy Neudauer - Pacific University
Host: Mahir
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
February 27
Friday
no events
March 2
no events
March 3
no events
March 4
Algebra and Combinatorics

Some results about saturation

Stephen Landsittel - Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Harvard University
Host: Tai Ha
Gibson Hall, room 126 3:00 PM
Given a local ring R we can ask when saturation of ideals in R commutes with other operations on ideals (such as extension to a ring containing R). We show that the condition that extension of ideals along a ring map R \to S commutes with saturation controls inherent properties of the rings R & S, such as Cohen-Macaulayness and unramifiedness.
March 5
Colloquium

TBA

Sergio R. López-Permouth - Ohio University
Host: Mahir
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 6
no events
March 2 - March 6
March 2
Monday
no events
March 3
Tuesday
no events
March 4
Wednesday
Algebra and Combinatorics

Some results about saturation

Stephen Landsittel - Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Harvard University
Host: Tai Ha
Gibson Hall, room 126 3:00 PM
Given a local ring R we can ask when saturation of ideals in R commutes with other operations on ideals (such as extension to a ring containing R). We show that the condition that extension of ideals along a ring map R \to S commutes with saturation controls inherent properties of the rings R & S, such as Cohen-Macaulayness and unramifiedness.
March 5
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Sergio R. López-Permouth - Ohio University
Host: Mahir
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 6
Friday
no events
March 9
no events
March 10
no events
March 11
no events
March 12
Colloquium

TBA

Bernhard Heim - Universitat Koln
Host: Olivia
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 13
no events
March 9 - March 13
March 9
Monday
no events
March 10
Tuesday
no events
March 11
Wednesday
no events
March 12
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Bernhard Heim - Universitat Koln
Host: Olivia
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 13
Friday
no events
March 16
no events
March 17
no events
March 18
no events
March 19
Colloquium

TBA

Ivan Corwin - Columbia University
Host: Guido
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 20
no events
March 16 - March 20
March 16
Monday
no events
March 17
Tuesday
no events
March 18
Wednesday
no events
March 19
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Ivan Corwin - Columbia University
Host: Guido
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
March 20
Friday
no events
March 23
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 24
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 25
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 26
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 27
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 23 - March 27
March 23
Monday
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 24
Tuesday
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 25
Wednesday
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 26
Thursday
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 27
Friday
Holiday

Spring Break

No Classes
March 30
no events
March 31
no events
April 1
no events
April 2
no events
April 3
no events
March 30 - April 3
March 30
Monday
no events
March 31
Tuesday
no events
April 1
Wednesday
no events
April 2
Thursday
no events
April 3
Friday
no events
April 6
no events
April 7
no events
April 8
no events
April 9
Colloquium

Linear Flows on Translation Prisms

Jayadev S. Athreya - University of Washington
Host: Kalina & Edna
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
We will share a story that brings together geometry, dynamics, and number theory in interesting and novel ways, and also creates some very compelling imagery- the talk will have lots of pictures, and all relevant background notions will be introduced and explained. Motivated by the study of billiards in polyhedra, we study linear flows in a family of singular flat 3-manifolds which we call translation prisms. Using ideas of Furstenberg, and Veech, we connect results about weak mixing properties of flows on translation surfaces to ergodic properties of linear flows on translation prisms, and use this to obtain several results about unique ergodicity of these prism flows and related billiard flows. Furthermore, we construct explicit eigenfunctions for translation flows in pseudo-Anosov directions with Pisot-Vijayraghavan expansion factors, and use this construction to build explicit examples of non-ergodic prism flows, and non-ergodic billiard flows in a right prism over a regular n-gon for n = 7, 9, 14, 16, 18, 20, 24, 30. This is joint work with Nicolas Bedaride, Pat Hooper, and Pascal Hubert.
April 10
no events
April 6 - April 10
April 6
Monday
no events
April 7
Tuesday
no events
April 8
Wednesday
no events
April 9
Thursday
Colloquium

Linear Flows on Translation Prisms

Jayadev S. Athreya - University of Washington
Host: Kalina & Edna
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
We will share a story that brings together geometry, dynamics, and number theory in interesting and novel ways, and also creates some very compelling imagery- the talk will have lots of pictures, and all relevant background notions will be introduced and explained. Motivated by the study of billiards in polyhedra, we study linear flows in a family of singular flat 3-manifolds which we call translation prisms. Using ideas of Furstenberg, and Veech, we connect results about weak mixing properties of flows on translation surfaces to ergodic properties of linear flows on translation prisms, and use this to obtain several results about unique ergodicity of these prism flows and related billiard flows. Furthermore, we construct explicit eigenfunctions for translation flows in pseudo-Anosov directions with Pisot-Vijayraghavan expansion factors, and use this construction to build explicit examples of non-ergodic prism flows, and non-ergodic billiard flows in a right prism over a regular n-gon for n = 7, 9, 14, 16, 18, 20, 24, 30. This is joint work with Nicolas Bedaride, Pat Hooper, and Pascal Hubert.
April 10
Friday
no events
April 13
no events
April 14
no events
April 15
no events
April 16
Colloquium

TBA

Henry Adams - University of Florida
Host: Rafal
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
April 17
no events
April 13 - April 17
April 13
Monday
no events
April 14
Tuesday
no events
April 15
Wednesday
no events
April 16
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Henry Adams - University of Florida
Host: Rafal
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
April 17
Friday
no events
April 20
no events
April 21
no events
April 22
no events
April 23
Colloquium

TBA

Nick Andersen - BYU
Host: Olivia
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
April 24
no events
April 20 - April 24
April 20
Monday
no events
April 21
Tuesday
no events
April 22
Wednesday
no events
April 23
Thursday
Colloquium

TBA

Nick Andersen - BYU
Host: Olivia
Norman Mayer 200B 3:30 PM
Title and abstract to be announced
April 24
Friday
no events
April 27
no events
April 28
no events
April 29
no events
April 30
no events
May 1
no events
April 27 - May 1
April 27
Monday
no events
April 28
Tuesday
no events
April 29
Wednesday
no events
April 30
Thursday
no events
May 1
Friday
no events
May 4
no events
May 5
no events
May 6
no events
May 7
no events
May 8
no events
May 4 - May 8
May 4
Monday
no events
May 5
Tuesday
no events
May 6
Wednesday
no events
May 7
Thursday
no events
May 8
Friday
no events
May 11
no events
May 12
no events
May 13
no events
May 14
no events
May 15
no events
May 11 - May 15
May 11
Monday
no events
May 12
Tuesday
no events
May 13
Wednesday
no events
May 14
Thursday
no events
May 15
Friday
no events
May 18
no events
May 19
no events
May 20
no events
May 21
no events
May 22
no events
May 18 - May 22
May 18
Monday
no events
May 19
Tuesday
no events
May 20
Wednesday
no events
May 21
Thursday
no events
May 22
Friday
no events
May 25
no events
May 26
no events
May 27
no events
May 28
no events
May 29
no events
May 25 - May 29
May 25
Monday
no events
May 26
Tuesday
no events
May 27
Wednesday
no events
May 28
Thursday
no events
May 29
Friday
no events
Tulane Spin