All Seminars & Colloquia
Wednesday, 3/19/2014, 9:30pm - 11:59pm
Title: Traces, cross ratios and two generator subgroups of SU(3,1)
Speaker: Krishnendu Gondgopadhyay ( IISER Mohali. India)
Time:Wednesday March 19, 2014,
Place: Seminar room 267
Nonlocal calculus, nonlocal balance laws and asymptotically compatible discretizations
Wednesday, 3/19/2014, 8:00pm - 11:59pm
Speaker: Qiang Du, Penn State University
Abstract: Nonlocality is ubiquitous in nature. While partial differential
equations (PDE) have been used as effective models of many physical
processes, nonlocal models and nonlocal balanced laws are also attracting
more and more attentions as possible alternatives to treat anomalous
process and singular behavior. In this talk, we exploit the use of a
recently developed nonlocal vector calculus to study a class of constrained
value problems on bounded domains associated with some nonlocal
Wednesday, 3/19/2014, 5:00pm - 11:59pm
Title: Traces, cross ratios and two generator subgroups of SU(3,1)
Speaker: Krishnendu Gondgopadhyay ( IISER Mohali. India)
Time:Wednesday March 19, 2014, 5:30pm-6:30pm
Place: Seminar room
Tuesday, 3/18/2014, 9:30pm - 11:59pm
Title: Introduction to Khovanov type graph homology for non-commutative algebras I:
Homology of small categories with functor coefficients
Speaker: Jing Wang (GWU)
Time: Tuesday, March 18, 2014, 5:30pm-6:30
Place: Seminar room 267
Tuesday, 3/18/2014, 9:30pm - 11:59pm
Title: Introduction to Khovanov type graph homology for non-commutative algebras I:
Homology of small categories with functor coefficients
Speaker: Jing Wang (GWU)
Time: Tuesday, March 18, 2014, 5:30pm-6:30
Place: Seminar room 267
A Case of Anything Goes in Infinite Ergodic Theory
Friday, 3/7/2014, 8:00pm - 11:59pm
Speaker: Terry Adams, US DoD
Authors: Terry Adams and Cesar Silva
Tuesday, 3/4/2014, 9:00pm - 11:59pm
Location: Seminar Room (Monroe Hall 267)
Abstract: In this talk I will give an overview of computability theory. I will discuss the basic concepts and ideas of the field, the types of things we study, and give some fun examples of "computable" and "noncomputable" objects. This talk should be accessible to all math graduate students.
Computable categoricity of computable partial injection structures
Thursday, 2/27/2014, 10:15pm - 11:59pm
Speaker: Leah Marshall, GWU