• CCMS Colloquium: Inaugurual Barbara Beechler Lecture

    CCMS Colloquium invites you to the final talk of the 2023-2024 academic year and the inaugural Barbara Beechler Lecture by Professor Judy Grabiner, Flora Sanborn Pitzer Professor of Mathematics Emerita. Title: It’s All for the Best: Optimization in the History of Science Abstract: Many problems, from optics to economics, can be solved mathematically by finding […]

  • Lattice angles and quadratic forms (Lenny Fukshansky, CMC)

    Estella 2099

    What are the possible angles between two integer vectors in R^n? If we fix one such possible angle and one integer vector x, is there always another integer vector y that makes this angle with x? Assuming that x makes a given angle with some vector, how can we find the shortest such vector y? […]

  • Applied Math Seminar: Christina Edholm (Scripps College)

    Estella 1021 (Emmy Noether Room), Pomona College Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: Controlling the unmanageable: insight into control methods for biological systems Abstract: When formulating a model for a biological system, often we want to use the model to understand the implications of management options and how to optimize the implementation. There are various methods for implementing management through control theory, ranging from basic, optimal control, […]

  • Claremont Topology Seminar: Sam Nelson (CMC)

    Estella 2099

    We welcome all undergraduate/graduate students and faculty to attend topology seminar! Speaker: Sam Nelson (CMC) Title: Biquandle Module Quiver Representations Abstract: Biquandle module enhancements are invariants of knots and links generalizing the classical Alexander module invariant. A quiver categorification of these invariants was introduced in 2020. In this work-in-progress (joint with Yewon Joung from Hanyang […]

  • Biquandle module quiver representations (Sam Nelson, CMC)

    Estella 2113

    Biquandle module enhancements are invariants of knots and links generalizing the classical Alexander module invariant. A quiver categorification of these invariants was introduced in 2020. In this work-in-progress (joint with […]

  • Claremont Topology Seminar: Migiwa Sakurai (Shibaura Institute of Technology)

    Estella 2099

    We welcome all undergraduate/graduate students and faculty to attend topology seminar! Speaker: Migiwa Sakurai (Shibaura Institute of Technology) Title: Clasp pass moves and arrow polynomials of virtual knots Abstract: For classical knots, clasp pass moves are closely related to Vassiliev invariants of degree 3. Tsukamoto showed that the values of the Vassiliev invariant of degree […]

  • Analysis seminar: Gerald Beer (CSULA)

    Estella 2393, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, United States

    Title: A crash course in Bornologies Abstract: By a bornology on a nonempty set X, we mean a family of subsets that contains the singletons, that is stable under finite unions, and that is stable under taking subsets. The prototype for a bornology is the so-called metric bornology: the family of metrically bounded subsets of […]

  • Presentations of derived categories (Reginald Anderson, CMC)

    Estella 2099

    A modification of the cellular resolution of the diagonal given by Bayer-Popescu-Sturmfels gives a virtual resolution of the diagonal for smooth projective toric varieties and toric Deligne-Mumford stacks which are […]

  • A polyhedral view of refined q-t Catalan numbers (Max Hlavacek, Pomona College)

    Argue Auditorium, Pomona College 610 N. College Ave., Claremont, CA, United States

    Title: A polyhedral view of refined q-t Catalan numbers Speaker: Max Hlavacek Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Statistics department, Pomona College, Claremont Abstract: Many problems in algebraic combinatorics have geometric objects lurking in […]