Thursday, May 10, 
            2:10pm
            Liliana Borcea (Rice University) 
            
Array Imaging in Random Media
            In array imaging, we wish to find strong reflectors in a medium, 
            given measurements of the time traces of the scattered echoes at a 
            remote array of receivers. I will discuss array imaging in cluttered 
            media, modeled with random processes, in regimes with significant 
            multipathing of the waves by the inhomogeneities in the clutter. In 
            such regimes, the echoes measured at the array are noisy and exhibit 
            a lot of delay spread. This makes imaging difficult and the usual 
            techniques give unreliable, statistically unstable results. I will 
            present a coherent interferometric imaging approach for random media, 
            which exploits systematically the spatial and temporal coherence in 
            the data to obtain statistically stable images. I will discuss theresolution 
            of this method and its statistical stability and I will illustrate 
            its performance with numerical simulations. 
            
 
            
            Monday, April 23
              Rowan Killip (UCLA)
              From the cicular moment problem to random matrices
              I will begin by reviewing some classical topics in analysis 
              then segue into my recent work on random matrices. 
            
            Monday, April 16
              Dan Romik (Bell Laboratories) 
              Gravitational allocation to Poisson points 
              An allocation rule for the standard Poisson point process in R^d 
              is a translation-invariant way of allocating to the Poisson points 
              mutually disjoint cells of volume 1 that cover almost all R^d. I 
              will describe a new construction in dimensions 3 and higher of an 
              allocation rule based on Newtonian gravitation: each Poisson point 
              is thought of as a star of unit mass, and the cell allocated to 
              a star is its basin of attraction with respect to the flow induced 
              by the total gravitational force exerted by all the stars. This 
              allocation rule is efficient, in the sense that the distance a typical 
              point has to move is a random variable with exponentially decreasing 
              tails. 
              The talk is based on joint work with Sourav Chatterjee, Ron Peled 
              and Yuval Peres. 
            
            Monday, March 26, 16:10, 2007, 4:10 pm 
              Thomas Bloom (University of Toronto): 
              Random Polynomials and (Pluri)-Potential Theory
              I will report on results on the expected distribution of zeros 
              of random polynomials in one and several (complex) variables.The 
              results will involve concepts from potential and pluripotential 
              theory. In particular,a recent result(joint with B.Shiffman)showing 
              that the expected distribution of the common zeros of m random Kac 
              polynomials (i.e.polynomials with standard Gaussians as coefficients) 
              in m variables tends,as the degree increases,to the product of the 
              angular measures on each of the m unit circles.This generalizes 
              a classical result of Hammarsley. 
            
            Monday, March 12
              Márton Balázs (Technical University Budapest) 
              
              Order of current variance in the simple exclusion process
              The simple exclusion process is one of the simplest stochastic 
              interacting particle systems: particles try to perform nearest neighbor 
              jumps on the integer line Z, but only succeed when the destination 
              site is not occupied by another particle. It is somewhat surprising 
              that such a system shows very exotic, time^{1/3}-scaling properties 
              when turning to these particles' current fluctuations. Limiting 
              distribution results have existed in this direction for the totally 
              asymmetric case (particles only try to jump to their right neighboring 
              site), and heavy combinatoric and analytic tools were used to prove 
              them.
              By a joint work with T. Seppäläinen, we managed to prove 
              this scaling (but not the limiting distribution) for the general 
              nearest neighbor asymmetric case, with the use of purely probabilistic 
              ideas. I will introduce the process, define the objects we worked 
              with in probabilistic coupling arguments, and summarize the method 
              that led to the proof of the scaling.
              (This work is related to recent results of Jeremy Quastel and Benedek 
              Valkó.) 
            
            Thursday, March 8, 2007, 4:10 pm, 
              Alan Hammond (Courant Institute) 
              Resonances in the cycle rooted spanning forest on a two-dimensional 
              torus
              Consider an n by m discrete torus with a directed graph structure, 
              in which one edge, pointing north or east with probability one-half, 
              independently, emanates from each vertex. The behaviour of the cycle 
              structure of this graph depends sensitively on the aspect ratio 
              m/n of the torus. The expected total number of edges contained in 
              cycles, for example, is peaked when m/n is close to a small rational. 
              This work, joint with Rick Kenyon, complements an earlier paper 
              of Kenyon and Wilson, that analyses resonance among paths in a model 
              that is equivalent to a honeycomb dimer model on a discrete torus. 
            
            
            Monday, February 26, 2007, 4:10 pm 
              Elena Kosygina (Baruch College and the CUNY Graduate Center) 
              
              Stochastic Homogenization of Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman Equations
              We consider a homogenization problem for Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman 
              equations in a stationary ergodic random media. After a brief review 
              of the standard approach for periodic Hamiltonians, we shall discuss 
              the difficulties and current methods of stochastic homogenization 
              for such equations and explain the connection with large deviations 
              for diffusions in a random medium. This is a joint work with F. 
              Rezakhanlou and S.R.S. Varadhan. 
            
            Monday, February 12, 2007, 4:10 pm 
              Jeremy Quastel (University of Toronto) 
              White Noise and the Korteweg-de Vries Equation
              In joint work with Benedek Valko (Toronto) we found that Gaussian 
              white noise is an invariant measure for KdV on the circle. In this 
              talk we will describe the relevant concepts, what the result means 
              both mathematically and physically, and give some ideas of the proof. 
              (The preprint may be downloaded from here 
            
            Monday, February 5, 2007, 4:10 pm 
              Manjunath Krsihnapur (University of Toronto) 
              Zeros of random analytic functions and Determinantal point processes
              On each of the plane, the sphere and the unit disk, there is 
              exactly a one-parameter family of Gaussian analytic functions whose 
              zeros have isometry-invariant distributions (Sodin). Of these there 
              is only one whose zero set is a determinantal point process (Peres-Virag). 
              By using Gaussian analytic functions as building blocks, we construct 
              many non-Gaussian random analytic functions with invariant zero 
              sets. We pick out certain candidates among these, whose zero sets 
              may be expected to be determinantal. We prove that this is indeed 
              the case for a family of random polynomials on the sphere, and partially 
              prove the same for a family of random analytic functions on the 
              unit disk. No prior knowledge of determinantal point processes or 
              random analytic functions is necessary. These results are from my 
              thesis. 
            
            Monday, January 29, 2007, 14:10 
              Bálint Virág (University of Toronto) 
              Scaling Limits of Random Matrices
              Recently, it has become clear that the sine and Airy point processes 
              arising from random matrix eigenvalues play a fundamental role in 
              probability theory, partly due to their connection to Riemann zeta 
              zeros and random permutations. I will describe recent work on the 
              Stochastic Airy and Stochastic sine differential equations, which 
              are shown to describe these point processes and can be thought of 
              as scaling limits of random matrices. This new approach resolves 
              some open problems, e.g. it generalizes these point processes for 
              all values of the parameter beta. 
            
            Wednesday, December 6, 2006, 15:10 
              Dimitris Cheliotis (University of Toronto) 
              Patterns for the 1-dimensional random walk in the random environment 
              - a functional LIL
              We start with a one dimensional random walk (or diffusion) in 
              a Wiener-like environment. We look at its graph at different, increasing 
              scales natural for it. What are the patterns that appear repeatedly? 
              We characterize them through a functional law of the iterated logarithm 
              analogous to Strassen's result for Brownian motion and simple random 
              walk. 
            The talk is based on joint work with Balint Virag. 
            
            Monday, November 27, 2006, 4:10 pm 
              Antal Járai (Carleton University) 
              Random walk on the incipient infinite cluster for oriented percolation 
              in high dimensions
              We consider simple random walk on the incipient infinite cluster 
              for the spread-out model of oriented percolation in d+1 dimensions. 
              For d > 6, we obtain bounds on exit times, transition probabilities, 
              and the range of the random walk, which establish that the spectral 
              dimension of the incipient infinite cluster is 4/3, and thereby 
              prove a version of the Alexander-Orbach conjecture in this setting. 
              The proof divides into two parts. One part establishes general estimates 
              for simple random walk on an arbitrary infinite random graph, given 
              suitable bounds on volume and effective resistance for the random 
              graph. A second part then provides these bounds on volume and effective 
              resistance for the incipient infinite cluster in dimensions d > 
              6, by extending results about critical oriented percolation obtained 
              previously via the lace expansion. 
            
            Monday, November 20, 2006, 4:30 pm 
              Alexander Holroyd (University of British Columbia) 
              Bootstrap Percolation - a case study in theory versus experiment 
              
              Cellular automata arise naturally in the study of physical systems, 
              and exhibit a seemingly limitless range of intriguing behaviour. 
              Such models lend themselves naturally to computer simulation, but 
              rigorous analysis can be notoriously difficult, and can yield highly 
              unexpected results. Bootstrap percolation is a very simple model 
              for nucleation and growth which turns out to hold many surprises. 
              Sites in a square grid are initially declared "infected" 
              independently with some fixed probability. Subsequently, healthy 
              sites become infected if they have at least two infected neighbours, 
              while infected sites remain infected forever. The model undergoes 
              a phase transition at a certain threshold whose asymptotic value 
              differs from numerical predictions by more than a factor of two! 
              This discrepancy points to a previously unsuspected phenomenon called 
              "crossover", and leads to further intriguing questions. 
              
            
            
            
            Monday, November 13, 2006, 4:10 pm 
            
Balázs Szegedy (University of Toronto) 
            
Limits of discrete structures and group invariant measures
            An important branch of statistics studies networks (structures) 
            that grow randomly according to some law. A natural question is whether 
            there is a natural limit object for the process. We present a group 
            theoretic approach to this problem. 
            
            Monday, October 30, 2006, 4:10 pm 
              Bálint Tóth (Technical University Budapest) 
              
              Tagged particle diffusion in 1d Rayleigh-gas - old and new results
              I will consider the M -> 0 limit for tagged particle diffusion 
              in a 1-dimensional Rayleigh-gas, studied originaly by Sinai and 
              Soloveichik (1986), respectively, by Szász and Tóth 
              (1986). In this limit we derive a new type of model for tagged paricle 
              diffusion, with Calogero-Moser-Sutherland (i.e. inverse quadratic) 
              interaction potential between the two central particles. Computer 
              simulations on this new model reproduce exactly the numerical value 
              of the limiting variance obtained by Boldrighini, Frigio and Tognetti 
              (2002). I will also present new bounds on the limiting variance 
              of tagged particle diffusion in (variants of) 1D Rayleigh gas which 
              improve some bounds of Szász, Tóth (1986). The talk 
              will be based on joint work of the following three authors: Péter 
              Bálint, Bálint Tóth, Péter Tóth. 
            
            
            Friday, October 27, 2006, 2:10pm 
              Bernard Shiffman (John Hopkins University) 
              Complex zeros of random multivariable polynomial systems
              I will discuss the distribution of zeros of systems of independent 
              Gaussian random polynomials in n complex variables. Results on the 
              distribution of the number N(U) of zeros in a complex domain U of 
              a random polynomial of one complex variable were given in recent 
              papers of Sodin-Tsirelson and Forrester-Honner. They showed that 
              the variance of N(U) grows like the square root of the degree d, 
              and thus the number of zeros in U is "self-averaging" 
              in the sense that its fluctuations are of smaller order than its 
              typical values. A natural question is whether self-averaging occurs 
              for zeros of systems of n independent Gaussian random polynomials 
              of n complex variables. To answer this question, I will give asymptotic 
              formulas for the variance of the number of simultaneous zeros in 
              a domain U in C^n as the degree d of the polynomials goes to infinity. 
              I will explain how "correlation currents" for zeros and 
              complex potential theory are used to compute variances for complex 
              zeros. This talk involves joint work with Steve Zelditch.
            
            Monday, October 16, 2006, 4:10 pm 
              Vladimir Vinogradov (Ohio University) 
              On Local Approximations For Two Classes of Distributions
              We derive local approximations along with estimates of the remainders 
              for two classes of integer-valued variables. One of them is comprised 
              of Pólya-Aeppli distributions, while members of the other 
              class are the convolutions of a zero-modified geometric law. We 
              also derive the closed-form representation for the probability function 
              of the latter convolutions and investigate its properties. This 
              provides the distribution theory foundation for the studies on branching 
              diffusions. Our techniques involve a Poisson mixture representation, 
              Laplace's method and upper estimates in the local Poisson theorem. 
              The parallels with Gnedenko's method of accompanying infinitely 
              divisible laws are established.
            
            Monday, October 2, 2006, 4:10 pm, 
              Omer Angel (University of Toronto)
              Invasion Percolation on Trees 
            We consider the invasion percolation cluster (IPC) in a regular 
              tree. We calculate the scaling limit of $r$-point functions, the 
              volume at a given level and up to a level. While the power laws 
              governing the IPC are the same as for the incipient infinite cluster 
              (IIC), the scaling functions differ. We also show that the IPC stochastically 
              dominates the IIC. Given time I will discuss the continuum scaling 
              limit of the IPC. 
            
            Monday, September 25, 2006, 4:10 pm, 
              Paul Federbush (Ann Arbor)
              A random walk on the permutation group, some formal long-time 
              asymptotic expansions
              We consider the group of permutations of the vertices of a lattice. 
              A random walk is generated by unit steps that each interchange two 
              nearest neighbor vertices of the lattice. We study the heat equation 
              on the permutation group, using the Laplacian associated to the 
              random walk. At t = 0 we take as initial conditions a probability 
              distribution concentrated at the identity. A natural conjecture 
              for the probability distribution at long times is that it is "approximately" 
              a product of Gaussian distributions for each vertex. That is, each 
              vertex diffuses independently of the others. We obtain some formal 
              asymptotic results in this direction. The problem arises in certain 
              ways of treating the Heisenberg model in statistical mechanics. 
            
            
            Monday, September 18, 2006, 4:10 pm, 
              Siva Athreya (Indian Statistical Institute, Bangalore)
              Age-Dependent Superprocesses
              In this talk I will discuss an age dependent branching particle 
              system and its rescaled limit the super-process. The above systems 
              are non-local in nature (i.e. the position of the offspring is not 
              the same as that of the parent) and some specific difficulties arise 
              in this setting. We shall begin with a review of the literature, 
              discuss the above difficulties and present some new observations.
            
            Tuesday, September 5, 2006, 4:10pm 
              Wilfrid Kendall (Warwick)
              Coupling all the Levy stochastic areas of multidimensional Brownian 
              motion
              I will talk about how to construct a successful co-adapted coupling 
              of two copies of an n-dimensional Brownian motion (B1, ... , Bn) 
              while simultaneously coupling all corresponding copies of Levy stochastic 
              areas.