• The Chow ring of heavy/light Hassett spaces via tropical geometry (Dagan Karp, HMC)

    On Zoom

    Hassett spaces in genus 0 are moduli spaces of weighted pointed stable rational curves; they are important in the minimal model program and enumerative geometry. We compute the Chow ring of heavy/light Hassett spaces. The computation involves intersection theory on the toric variety corresponding to a graphic matroid, and rests upon the work of Cavalieri-Hampe-Markwig-Ranganathan. […]

  • Projections on Banach spaces and a lifting property of operators (Prof. Botelho)

    Zoom

    Title: Projections on Banach spaces and a lifting property of operators Prof. Maria Fernanda Botelho Department of Mathematical Sciences The University Of Memphis Abstract: In this talk I will present properties of contractive projections and explain their role in the existence of norm preserving lifts of operators. A pair of Banach spaces (X, J), with […]

  • Applied Math Seminar — Christopher Miles (UC Irvine)

    Emmy Noether Room, Estella 1021, Pomona College, 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States

    Title:  Collective motion in the mitotic spindle Abstract:  Math models of interacting individuals moving as a collective have been profoundly successful in describing physical and social phenomena ranging from swarming insects […]

  • Collective Behavior in Locust Swarms from Data to Differential Equations (Prof. Jasper Weinburd)

    Zoom

    Title: Collective Behavior in Locust Swarms from Data to Differential Equations   Prof. Jasper Weinburd Department of Mathematics Harvey Mudd College   Abstract: Locusts are devastating pests that infest and destroy crops. Locusts forage and migrate in large swarms which exhibit distinctive shapes that improve efficiency on the group level, a phenomenon known as collective […]

  • Thanksgiving Week

    Emmy Noether Room, Millikan 1021, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, California

    No applied math talk

  • Odd subgraphs are odd (Asaf Ferber, UC Irvine)

    On Zoom

    In this talk we discuss some problems related to finding large induced subgraphs of a given graph G which satisfy some degree-constraints (for example, all degrees are odd, or all degrees are j mod k, etc). We survey some classical results, present some interesting and challenging problems, and sketch solutions to some of them. This […]

  • A tribute to Professor Ellis Cumberbatch (1934-2021)

    Zoom

    Title: A tribute to Professor Ellis Cumberbatch (1934-2021) Abstract: The math colloquium on December 1st will be devoted to remembrances of our beloved CGU colleague Professor Ellis Cumberbatch, a pillar of the Claremont mathematics community, who passed away in September. Three brief talks by his friends and collaborators, Professor John Ockendon (University of Oxford), Dr. […]

  • Difference sets in higher dimensions (David Conlon, Cal Tech)

    On Zoom

    Let d >= 2 be a natural number. We determine the minimum possible size of the difference set A-A in terms of |A| for any sufficiently large finite subset A of R^d that is not contained in a translate of a hyperplane. By a construction of Stanchescu, this is best possible and thus resolves an […]

  • Where do Putnam problems come from? (Prof. Andrew Bernoff)

    Title: Where do Putnam problems come from? Speaker: Andrew Bernoff, Department of Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College Abstract: The William Lowell Putnam Exam is the preeminent mathematics competition for undergraduate college students in the United States and Canada. I recently finished a three year stint on the competition’s problem committee. This talk is a personal reflection on […]

  • Questions on Symmetric Chains (Shahriar Shahriari, Pomona)

    On Zoom

    The set of subsets {1, 3}, {1, 3, 4}, {1, 3, 4, 6} is a symmetric chain in the partially ordered set (poset) of subsets of {1,...,6}. It is a chain, because each of the subsets is a subset of the next one. It is symmetric because the collection has as many subsets with less […]