Emmy Noether Room, Estella 1021, Pomona College,
610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States
Abstract: The three-dimensional incompressible Euler equations describe the motion of an ideal fluid, yet the mechanisms that govern the possible loss of regularity of smooth solutions remain only partially understood. A classical result of Beale, Kato, and Majda shows that if a smooth solution breaks down in finite time, then the time integral of the […]
Estella 2099, Pomona College
610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States
Abstract: In general, the objective of algebraic topology is to classify spaces using some algebraic invariants or up to some notion of equivalence. In the area of equivariant homotopy theory, the goal is the same but now spaces equipped with a group action are considered and algebraic invariants of choice are homotopy groups. It turns […]
Estella 2099, Pomona College
610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States
Abstract: Let C be a compact convex set (in a locally convex topological vector space). By Choquet’s theorem, every point in C is the barycenter of a probability measure supported on the extreme points. When this representing measure is unique, C is called a simplex. Simplices arise naturally in various fields of mathematics: the space […]
Estella 2099, Pomona College
610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States
Abstract: We study metrics on completely positive maps, and in particular on quantum channels, induced by seminorms from noncommutative geometry. Using an infinite-dimensional analogue of the Choi–Jamiołkowski correspondence, we construct such metrics and show that, under suitable assumptions, they satisfy stability and chaining. I will present the main ideas and explain how spectral triples and […]
Estella 2099, Pomona College
610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States
Abstract: An isometry between two normed vector spaces is a linear map that preserves the norm (i.e., the length of each output agrees with the length of its input). For the classical $p$-norms, isometries have a very concrete description when $p\neq 2$: they are given by signed permutations of the coordinates. In this talk, I […]
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