Week of Events
Sequences with identical autocorrelation spectra (Daniel Katz, Cal State Northridge)
Sequences with identical autocorrelation spectra (Daniel Katz, Cal State Northridge)
In this talk, we explore sequences and their autocorrelation functions. Knowing the autocorrelation function of a sequence is equivalent to knowing the magnitude of its Fourier transform. Resolving the lack of phase information is called the phase problem. We say that two sequences are equicorrelational to mean that they have the same aperiodic autocorrelation function. […]
Claremont Topology Seminar: Orsola Capovilla-Searle (UC Davis)
Claremont Topology Seminar: Orsola Capovilla-Searle (UC Davis)
We welcome all undergraduate/graduate students and faculty to attend topology seminar! Speaker: Orsola Capovilla-Searle (UC Davis) Title: Exact Lagrangian fillings of Legendrian links Abstract: An important problem in contact topology is to understand Legendrian submanifolds; these submanifolds are always tangent to the plane field given by the contact structure. Legendrian links arise as wavefronts in […]
CCMS Colloquium: Braids, Polynomials, and Hilbert’s 13th Problem (Jesse Wolfson, UC Irvine)
CCMS Colloquium: Braids, Polynomials, and Hilbert’s 13th Problem (Jesse Wolfson, UC Irvine)
Speaker:Jesse Wolfson, UC Irvine Title: Braids, Polynomials, and Hilbert’s 13th Problem Abstract: There are still completely open fundamental questions about polynomials in one variable. One example is Hilbert’s 13th Problem, a conjecture going back long before Hilbert. Indeed, the invention of algebraic topology grew out of an effort to understand how the roots of a […]
Analysis Seminar: Exceptional Sets for Divergent Fourier Series (Prof. Michael O’Neill (CMC))
Analysis Seminar: Exceptional Sets for Divergent Fourier Series (Prof. Michael O’Neill (CMC))
Title: Exceptional Sets for Divergent Fourier Series Abstract: A survey of some old and newer results on divergent Fourier series with some comments on how they relate to undergraduate analysis courses and (time permitting) leading to a brief discussion of an open question on the size of exceptional sets in divergence examples and some progress […]
GEMS November 2nd Session
GEMS November 2nd Session
This GEMS session will be facilitated by Professor David Bachman from Pitzer College. Title: How does ChatGPT work? Abstract: In 2022 ChatGPT took the world by storm and challenged our ideas of what computers are capable of. However, few people have any sense of how this technology works. Through hands-on activities participants will learn about […]