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                Fields Institute Colloquium/Seminar in Applied Mathematics 
                  2010-2011
               
              
                 
                  | Organizing Committee  | 
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                  Jim Colliander (Toronto)   
                    Walter Craig (McMaster)    
                    Catherine Sulem (Toronto)  | 
                  Robert McCann (Toronto) 
                    Adrian Nachman (Toronto)     
                    Mary Pugh (Toronto)    
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            The Fields Institute Colloquium/Seminar in Applied Mathematics 
              is a monthly colloquium series for mathematicians in the areas of 
              applied mathematics and analysis. The series alternates between 
              colloquium talks by internationally recognized experts in the field, 
              and less formal, more specialized seminars.In recent years, the 
              series has featured applications to diverse areas of science and 
              technology; examples include super-conductivity, nonlinear wave 
              propagation, optical fiber communications, and financial modeling. 
              The intent of the series is to bring together the applied mathematics 
              community on a regular basis, to present current results in the 
              field, and to strengthen the potential for communication and collaboration 
              between researchers with common interests. We meet for one session 
              per month during the academic year. The organizers welcome suggestions 
              for speakers and topics. 
            
               
                 
                  2010-11 
                    Schedule - Future talks to be held at the Fields Institute 
                    
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                   Wednesday, June 1, 2011 
                    3:10PM 
                    Fields Institute, Room 230 
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                   Erwan Faou (University of Rennes) 
                    Resonances and long time integration of nonlinear Schroedinger 
                    equations 
                   
                  In this talk, we will review some recent advances in long 
                    time simulation of Hamiltonian PDE, by focusing on the special 
                    case of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with cubic 
                    nonlinearity and without potential (the resonant case). After 
                    discussing some results concerning the long time behavior 
                    of the exact solution (preservation of the actions in dimension 
                    1, energy cascade in dimension 2), we will study the persistence 
                    of such qualitative behaviors by fully discrete splitting 
                    schemes. In particular, we will show how the choice of the 
                    number of grid points or the stepsize can lead to numerical 
                    instabilities, and on the other hand how implicit schemes 
                    are in general unable to reproduce correctly the energy exchanges 
                    in such a resonant situation. The main tool to analyze these 
                    phenomena is the use of backward error analysis for splitting 
                    methods under CFL applied to Hamiltonian PDEs, as stated in 
                    a recent common work with B. Grébert. 
                     
                     
                   
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                  Past Talks
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                Wednesday, 
                  April 20, 2011 
                  3:10PM 
                  Fields Institute, Room 230 | 
                 
                   Nicolas Perinet, UOIT 
                    Numerical simulation of Faraday waves  
                     
                    When two superposed fluids are vertically shaken the initially 
                    plane interface forms patterns if the oscil- lation is of 
                    suffcient amplitude. This phenomenon, called the Faraday instability, 
                    constitutes an amazingly rich macroscopic model for the study 
                    of pattern formation. In addition to the classically observed 
                    crystalline patterns (stripes, squares or hexagons) very singular 
                    structures have been seen: quasipatterns, oscillons and superlattices. 
                   
                  In an attempt to survey the patterns supplied by the Faraday 
                    experiment, we solve the complete nonlinear NavierStokes 
                    equations by a finite-difference projection method coupled 
                    to a Front-Tracking technique for the calculation of the surface 
                    tension forces and advection of the interface. 
                  In the linear regime the instability thresholds and temporal 
                    eigenmodes calculated numerically are com- pared to those 
                    obtained from Floquet theory. In the nonlinear regime we compare 
                    with experimental work which provides quantitative features 
                    of squares and hexagons arising at saturation for several 
                    forcing amplitudes. The evolution of the nonlinear spatial 
                    modes and the spatiotemporal spectra are in good agreement 
                    with experimental results. 
                  However, experiments and early numerical simulations highlight 
                    that the hexagonal symmetry may only be transient. The alternate 
                    emergence of hexagonal structures and patterns with other 
                    symmetries suggests that the hexagonal regime may be a fixed 
                    point belonging to a homoclinic orbit. We have developed an 
                    algorithm which forces the hexagonal symmetry in order to 
                    calculate the fixed state that will be the starting point 
                    for the exploration of this orbit. 
                  Finally, we have carried out a numerical study of the drift 
                    instability in the Faraday experiment in an annular configuration. 
                    An azimuthal displacement of initially stationary patterns 
                    has been experimentally observed when the oscillation amplitude 
                    exceeds a secondary threshold. Our numerical simulations have 
                    con?rmed this result. Bifurcation diagrams displaying additional 
                    instabilities have been constructed, as well as a complementary 
                    spatio-temporal spectral analysis. 
                  This is joint work with Damir Juric (Laboratoire dInformatique 
                    pour la Mecanique et les Sciences de lIngenieur, CNRS, 
                    Orsay) and Laurette Tuckerman (Laboratoire de Physique et 
                    Mecanique des Milieux Heterogenes, ESPCI-CNRS, Paris) 
                   
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                   Wednesday, April 20, 2011 
                    2:10PM 
                    Fields Institute, Room 230 
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                   Greg Lewis, UOIT 
                    Mixed-mode solutions in the differentially heated rotating 
                    annulus 
                   
                    The differentially heated rotating annulus experiment has 
                    long been regarded as a useful tool for studying baroclinic 
                    waves. These waves can be generated in rotating fluids with 
                    an imposed horizontal temperature gradient, and thus, may 
                    play an important role in the poleward transport of heat and 
                    momentum in the atmosphere. 
                  We present a bifurcation analysis of a mathematical model 
                    that uses the (three-dimensional) Navier-Stokes equations 
                    in the Boussinesq approximation to describe the flow of a 
                    near unity Prandtl number fluid (i.e. air) in the differentially 
                    heated rotating annulus. In particular, we study the Hopf 
                    bifurcations that correspond to the transition from axisymmetric 
                    to nonaxisymmetric flow, where the axisymmetric flow loses 
                    stability to an azimuthal mode of integer wave number, and 
                    rotating waves may be observed. Of particular interest are 
                    the double Hopf (Hopf-Hopf) bifurcations that occur along 
                    the transition, where thereis an interaction of two modes 
                    with azimuthal wave numbers differing by one. 
                  The analysis shows that in certain regions in parameter space, 
                    stable quasiperiodic mixed-azimuthal mode solutions result 
                    from the mode-interaction. These flows have been called wave 
                    dispersion and interference vacillation. The results differ 
                    from similar studies of the annulus with a higher Prandtl 
                    number fluid (e.g.water). In particular, we show that a decrease 
                    in Prandtl number can stabilize these mixed-mode solutions. 
                    We also discuss the mode-interaction with 1:2 spatial resonance, 
                    which indicates another mechanism by which a mixed-mode solution 
                    may arise. 
                   
                     
                   
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                   Wednesday, March 16, 2011 
                    3:10PM 
                    BA6183, Bahen Center, 40 St. George St. 
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                   Professor Charles Fefferman, Princeton University 
                     
                    Breakdown of Smoothness in the Muskat Problem   
                  The problem concerns the evolution of the interfaces between 
                    two or more fluids in a porous medium. The talk presents new 
                    phenomena arising when at least three fluids are present. 
                    (Joint work with several coauthors.) 
                   
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                December 
                  8, 2010 
                  2:10 p.m  
                  Room 230  | 
                Abdelmalek 
                  Abdesselam (U of Virginia) 
                  Introduction to the renormalization group as a rigorous tool 
                  in probability theory 
                  Ever since its introduction by Kenneth G. Wilson in the seventies, 
                    the renormalization group has been the main conceptual tool 
                    used by physicists in order to make meaningful calculations 
                    with functional integrals. The latter are, largely conjectural, 
                    infinite-dimensional probability measures over spaces of functions 
                    which one can try to construct rigorously using a scaling 
                    limit of similar measures where the continuum is discretized 
                    by finer and finer grids. 
                  The renormalization group is a dynamical system corresponding 
                    to averaging over the short distance fluctuations of the random 
                    function and zooming out by a fixed scale ratio. Fixed points 
                    of this dynamical system correspond to the possible scaling 
                    limits one can achieve. The renormalization group provides 
                    a far reaching generalization of the familiar central limit 
                    theorem, in a situation where the random variables are dependent, 
                    in a way which is subordinated to the geometry of the space 
                    labeling these variables. In this nontechnical presentation, 
                    we will provide an introduction to the basic ideas of the 
                    renormalization group. 
                   
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                November 
                  10, 2010 
                  2:10 p.m. 
                  Room 230 | 
                Boris 
                  Khesin (University of Toronto) 
                   Optimal transport and geodesics for H1 metrics on diffeomorphism 
                    groups 
                  We describe the Wasserstein space for the homogeneous H1 
                    metric which turns out to be isometric to (a piece of) an 
                    infinite-dimensional sphere. The corresponding geodesic flow 
                    turns out to be integrable, and it is a generalization of 
                    the Hunter-Saxton equation. The corresponding optimal transport 
                    can be used for the "size-recognition", as opposed 
                    to the "shape recognition". This is a joint work 
                    with J. Lenells, G. Misiolek, and S. Preston. 
                   
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                November 
                  10, 2010 
                  3:10 p.m. 
                  Room 230 | 
                CANCELLED 
                  Tony Gomis (NBI) 
                  Adomian Decomposition Method, Cherruault Transformations, 
                  Homotopy Perturbation Method, and Nonlinear Dynamics: Theories 
                  and Comparative Applications to Frontier problems  
                  New global methods for solving complex, nonlinear, continuous 
                    and discrete,deterministic and stochastic,differential or 
                    integral, and combined functional equations, will be presented 
                    and compared. This talk will outline the Adomian Decomposition 
                    Method,and the Homotopy Perturbation Techniques, all offering 
                    solutions as convergent infinite functional series.In this 
                    talk , the Cherruault Alienor transformations based on a generalization 
                    of the space-filling curves theory(for quasi-lossless dimensionality 
                    compression, and for functional Global Optimization ) will 
                    be outlined and applied to real-world problems. 
                   
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                August 
                  20, 2010 
                  2:10 pm 
                  Stewart Library | 
                Apala 
                  Majumdar (University of Oxford) 
                  The Landau-de Gennes theory of nematic liquid crystals: Uniaxiality 
                  versus Biaxiality  
                   
                  In this talk, we review two widely-used continuum theories for 
                  nematic liquid crystals: the Oseen-Frank theory, which is restricted 
                  to uniaxial nematics, and the more general Landau-de Gennes 
                  theory. We also discuss the analogies between the Landau-de 
                  Gennes theory and the celebrated Ginzburg-Landau theory for 
                  superconductors in three dimensions. We treat uniaxial and biaxial 
                  cases separately. The uniaxial case can be viewed as a generalized 
                  Ginzburg-Landau theory from a three-dimensional source into 
                  a three-dimensional target manifold although there are important 
                  technical differences arising from the nonlinearities in the 
                  governing equations. The biaxial case deals with maps from a 
                  three-dimensional source space into a five-dimensional target 
                  manifold and presents a whole host of new complexities. We use 
                  a combination of Ginzburg-Landau techniques and methods from 
                  singular perturbation theory and harmonic map theory to prove 
                  qualitative results on the structure, stability and dimension 
                  of defect sets in equilibrium configurations on three-dimensional 
                  domains and describe the equilibrium behaviour away from the 
                  defect set in terms of a limiting harmonic map. We also show 
                  that biaxiality is inevitable in certain model situations, particularly 
                  in the vicinity of defects. A part of this talk is joint work 
                  with Arghir Zarnescu. 
                   
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                July 
                  28 
                  2pm 
                  Room 230 
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                   Chris 
                    King (Northeastern University) 
                    The classical capacity of a quantum channel 
                  Quantum channels describe the dynamical evolution of open 
                    quantum systems. From the point of view of information theory, 
                    a quantum channel is also the simplest quantum analog of the 
                    discrete memoryless channel whose capacity for information 
                    transmission was analyzed by Shannon more than sixty years 
                    ago. This analogy has led to many interesting questions and 
                    conjectures concerning the capacities of quantum channels. 
                    In this talk I will describe recent progress regarding the 
                    transmission of classical information through a quantum channel, 
                    and in particular discuss recent counterexamples to the additivity 
                    conjecture. 
                   
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