Math Department
AWM Talk: Tania Hazra, Misericordia University
230 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, AL, United StatesColloquium – Changyou Wang (Purdue University)
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: 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 intermediate state between the liquid and the solid states. Given the importance, people have studied liquid crystals from the view point of modeling, computation, analysis, and engineering. In
Applied Math Seminar – Yajun Mei (Georgia Tech)
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: 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 in data acquisition, transmission or processing, and needs decide how to smartly observe which local components or features of high-dimensional streaming data at each and
Analysis Seminar – Xuan Wang (University of Alabama)
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: 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 overview of the main result for constant exponent spaces. Then I'll illustrate our latest research on the boundedness of harmonic conjugation in variable harmonic Bergman
Colloquium: Jo Ellis-Monaghan (Saint Michael’s College)
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: 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 graph drawing and computer chip layout problems, random graph theory and modeling the internet, graph connectivity measures and ecological systems, etc. Currently, scientists are engineering
Pi Mu Epsilon Seminar – Yuanzhen Shao (University of Alabama)
302 Gordon Palmer HallTitle: The geometry behind phase transitions in physics
Applied Math Seminar – Karl Glasner (University of Arizona)
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesMathematical 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, as well as forming the basis for molecular sized machines. Recent advances in nanoscale fabrication in polymer systems, in particular, has lead to growing interest
Analysis Seminar – Scott Rodney, Cape Breton University
346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: 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 elliptic equation $$-\textrm{Div}\left(Q(x)\nabla u(x) \right) = f(x)$$ in a smooth domain $\Omega$ of $\mathbb{R}^n$ with $f$ in the Birnbaum-Orlicz space $L^A(\Omega)$ ($A(t) = t^{n/2}\log^\sigma(e+t)$ with
32nd Annual University of Alabama System Joint Program in Applied Math Meeting
Joint Meeting Agenda 2019