Events

Colloquium – Changyou Wang (Purdue University)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Analysis of hydrodynamics of nematic liquid crystals Abstract: The orientation of Liquid crystal molecules has their preferable direction and exhibits an optical structure. Liquid crystal can also been viewed as an

Applied Math Seminar – Yajun Mei (Georgia Tech)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Bandit change-point detection and its application Abstract: We investigate the problem of bandit change-point problem when monitoring high-dimensional streaming data in resources constrained environments, where one has limited capacity

Analysis Seminar – Xuan Wang (University of Alabama)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Harmonic Conjugation in Variable Exponent Harmonic Bergman Spaces Abstract: I will talk about the harmonic conjugation in variable harmonic Bergman space. In the first part of the talk, I'll provide an

Colloquium: Jo Ellis-Monaghan (Saint Michael’s College)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title:  Combinatorial, topological, and computational approaches to DNA self-assembly. Abstract: Applications of immediate concern have driven some of the most interesting questions in the field of graph theory, for example

Applied Math Seminar – Karl Glasner (University of Arizona)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Mathematical Aspects of Nanoscale Self-Assembly Self-assembly is a fundamental process for creation of both biological and synthetic materials. The latter are being employed in important biotechnological applications like drug delivery,

Analysis Seminar – Scott Rodney, Cape Breton University

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Regularity Estimates for PDE with Data in Non-Standard Spaces Abstract: In this talk I present recent joint work with D. Cruz-Uribe. Given a weak super-solution $u\in W^{1,2}_0(\Omega)$ of the

Analysis Seminar – Joshua Isralowitz (SUNY Albany)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Sparse domination of commutators via matrix techniques Abstract: In this talk, we will show how one can obtain sparse domination of iterated commutators from a convex body domination of an operator