MSCS Seminar Calendar
Monday January 26, 2026
Algebraic Geometry SeminarD-affinity and related notions over fields of positive characteristic
Feliks Raczka (Institute for Advanced Studies)
3:00 PM in 636 SEO
The talk will be devoted to D-affinity of smooth projective varieties over fields of positive characteristic. First, I will recall the notion of a D-affine variety and justify its importance. Then, I will explain how in positive characteristic this notion relates to other properties defined in terms of the Frobenius morphism: the tilting property of Frobenius pushforwards of the structure sheaf, GFFRT, etc. In the last part of the talk I will present the results from my recent preprint https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.13340.
Tuesday January 27, 2026
Logic SeminarA characterization of relative decidability
Matthew Harrison-Trainor (UIC)
3:00 PM in 636 SEO
Let T be a recursively axiomatizable first-order theory. We say that T is relatively decidable if, for any model of T, the atomic diagram of that model can compute the full elementary diagram. For example, if T is model complete, then there is a uniform decision procedure which works for any model of T. We characterize the complete relatively decidable theories by showing that they have a sort of conservative extension which is model complete. The proof combines a standard theorem from computable structure theory with an intricate but elementary model-theoretic argument.
Monday February 2, 2026
Algebraic Geometry SeminarDeformations and the homotopy Lie algebra
Josh Pollitz (Syracuse University)
3:00 PM in 636 SEO
A semi-classical question of Avramov asks whether embedded deformations of a local ring correspond exactly to central elements in the homotopy Lie algebra of the ring. In this talk, I will explain the question and some recent insights. The latter is based on joint work with Briggs, Grifo, and Walker.
Analysis and Applied Mathematics SeminarNon-uniqueness and vanishing viscosity in the forced 2D Euler equations
Dallas Albritton (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
4:00 PM in 636 SEO
The forced 2D Euler equations exhibit non-unique solutions with vorticity in L^p, p > 1, whereas the corresponding Navier-Stokes solutions are unique. We investigate whether the inviscid limit from the forced 2D Navier-Stokes to Euler equations is a selection principle capable of "resolving" the non-uniqueness. We focus on solutions in a neighborhood of the non-uniqueness scenario discovered by Vishik; specifically, we incorporate viscosity and consider epsilon-size perturbations of his initial datum. We discover a uniqueness threshold below which the vanishing viscosity solution is unique and radial, and at which certain vanishing viscosity solutions converge to non-unique, non-radial solutions. Joint work with Maria Colombo and Giulia Mescolini (EPFL).
Friday February 6, 2026
Monday February 9, 2026
Monday February 16, 2026
Friday February 20, 2026
Monday February 23, 2026
Wednesday February 25, 2026
Monday March 2, 2026
Monday March 9, 2026
Wednesday March 11, 2026
Statistics and Data Science SeminarQuantile Portfolio Optimization
Lingjie Ma (UIC, Department of Finance)
4:15 PM in 636 SEO
It is well known that asset returns usually do not follow a normal distribution, rather, they have long and fat tails. This paper focuses on the quantile portfolio methodology, which considers the whole distribution of asset returns and employs expected loss as a risk measurement. In particular, we explore statistical properties of tau risk and propose related theories of quantile portfolio optimization. We also introduce portfolio performance terms for the quantile portfolio framework.
Monday March 16, 2026
Wednesday March 18, 2026
Monday March 30, 2026
Wednesday April 1, 2026
Monday April 6, 2026
Friday April 10, 2026
Monday April 13, 2026
Friday April 17, 2026
