MSCS Seminar Calendar
Monday April 28, 2025

SYZ Mirror Symmetry of Log Calabi-Yau Surfaces
Yu-Shen Lin (Boston University)
3:00 PM in 636 SEO
The Strominger-Yau-Zaslow conjecture predicts Calabi-Yau manifolds
admit special Lagrangian fibrations and provides a recipe for the
mirror construction. In this talk, I will explain the existence of
special Lagrangian fibrations in certain log Calabi-Yau surfaces.
Moreover, with the suitable mirror map the special Lagrangian
fibrations on the mirror pairs are dual to each other. The study of
these special Lagrangian fibrations also accidentally proved the
Torelli theorems of certain types of gravitational instantons.
Moreover, these setup the foundation for the equivalence of certain
open Gromov-Witten invariants and log Gromov-Witten invariants.

Proper rainbow saturation numbers
Emily Heath (Cal Poly Pomona)
3:00 PM in 1227 SEO
Given a graph $H$, we say that a graph $G$ is properly rainbow $H$-saturated if there exists some proper edge-coloring of $G$ which has no rainbow copy of $H$, but adding any edge to $G$ makes such an edge-coloring impossible. The proper rainbow saturation number is the minimum number of edges in an $n$-vertex properly rainbow $H$-saturated graph. In this talk, we will discuss new bounds on the proper rainbow saturation number for odd cycles, paths, and cliques.

An Onsager theorem in 2D
Razvan Radu (Princeton)
4:00 PM in 636 SEO
I will discuss the Nash iterative construction of non-conservative weak solutions to the Euler equations, with a particular focus on the difficulties presented by the two-dimensional case. I will then present a linear decoupling method, which enabled the construction of examples achieving sharp regularity for the 2D Euler equations, as well as for other systems.
Tuesday April 29, 2025

Differential-algebraic dimension in transserial tame pairs
Nigel Pynn-Coates (University of Vienna)
3:30 PM in 636 SEO
The theory of closed H-fields is model complete and axiomatizes the
theory of transseries and maximal Hardy fields, as Aschenbrenner, Van
den Dries, and Van der Hoeven have shown in a long series of works. To
better understand large closed H-fields, such as maximal Hardy fields, I
recently extended this model completeness to the theory of tame pairs of
closed H-fields. Building on this work, I will explain how to extend
differential-algebraic dimension on a closed H-field to tame pairs of
closed H-fields so that it is a fibred dimension function in the sense
of [L. van den Dries, "Dimension of definable sets, algebraic
boundedness and Henselian fields", Ann. Pure Appl. Logic 45.2 (1989),
189–209] and the nonempty dimension zero definable sets are exactly the
nonempty discrete definable sets. The model-theoretic notion of
coanalyzability will also make an appearance.
Wednesday April 30, 2025

Classifying Hyperbolic Ergodic Stationary Measures on K3 Surfaces with Large Automorphism Groups
Megan Roda (University of Chicago)
3:00 PM in 427 SEO
Let $X$ be a K3 surface. Consider a finitely supported probability measure $\mu$ on $\operatorname{Aut}(X)$ such that $\Gamma_{\mu} = \langle \operatorname{Supp}(\mu)\rangle < Aut(X)$ is non-elementary. We do not assume that $\Gamma_{\mu}$ contains any parabolic elements. We study and classify hyperbolic ergodic $\mu$-stationary probability measures on $X$.
Thursday May 1, 2025

DRP Presentations (2-5pm)
DRP Undergrad Mentees (UIC)
2:00 PM in 636 SEO
Undergrads who participated in the DRP will give short presentations on the topic they learned and read about over the course of the semester. Detailed titles and abstracts will be posted soon.
This semester twenty+ UIC undergraduates participated in the Directed Reading Program at UIC. In the DRP undergrads are paired with a supportive graduate student mentor and read through some mathematical text of the mentees choosing. One explicit goal of the program is to help undergraduates build mathematical strength, maturity, and independence.
Titles and Abstracts can be found here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1wRRme1QXOUrA9VubACfUIepr4ybkueXqu4OYvYTjfwE/edit?usp=sharing
Pizza is likely to be served.
Friday May 2, 2025

DRP Presentations (12-2:30pm)
DRP Undergrad Mentees (UIC)
12:00 PM in 636 SEO
Undergrads who participated in the DRP will give short presentations on the topic they learned and read about over the course of the semester. Detailed titles and abstracts will be posted soon.
This semester twenty+ UIC undergraduates participated in the Directed Reading Program at UIC. In the DRP undergrads are paired with a supportive graduate student mentor and read through some mathematical text of the mentees choosing. One explicit goal of the program is to help undergraduates build mathematical strength, maturity, and independence.
Titles and Abstracts can be found here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1wRRme1QXOUrA9VubACfUIepr4ybkueXqu4OYvYTjfwE/edit?usp=sharing
Pizza is likely to be served.

Mixed identities in linear groups and effective versions
Tsachik Gelander (Northwestern)
3:00 PM in 636 SEO
A mixed identity in group G is an equation W(x)=1 where W is a non-trivial word in the free product G∗⟨x⟩, which is satisfied for all x∈G. Mixed Identity Free (MIF) means that no such identity holds on G. When G has no mixed identities, one wishes to find such x effectively (w.r.t. the word metric). Set
f(n)=min { | g | : g∈G , W(g)≠1 for all W∈B(n) }
where B(n) is the n-th ball in G∗⟨x⟩.
If f is sub-exponential, there are outstanding applications for the reduced C*-algebra of the group, especially when the group also has rapid decay.
Recently, Elayavalli and Schafhauser gave a negative answer for the C*-algebraic Tarski problem by studying this property for free groups. More recently, Itamar Vigdorovich extended their work to uniform lattices in SL(n,R). What we proved is:
Theorem 1. For a f.g. linear group \Gamma with MIF, the function f is linear (i.e. f(n)
If the Zariski closure G is a classical group, then \Gamma is MIF, provided G is PSL(n), or G=SP_{2r} and \Gamma has no elements of order 2, or G=SO(n) and \Gamma has no elements g for which g+g^{-1} is a scalar. Along the way, we proved a new variant of the super approximation theorem, which is of independent interest.
This is a joint work with Nir Avni
Monday May 5, 2025
Monday May 12, 2025

From Hamiltonian Systems to Drones: Geometric Insights into Control and Dynamics
Leonardo Colombo (Centre for Automation and Robotics CSIC-UPM)
2:00 PM in 636 SEO
Hamiltonian systems have long been a cornerstone of classical mechanics, providing a powerful framework to describe and analyze the motion of physical systems. But what happens when these mathematical structures take flight? In this talk, we will explore how the geometric principles of Hamiltonian mechanics play a crucial role in the modeling and control of modern aerial vehicles, including drones. From symplectic structures and variational principles to optimal control and real-world applications, we will uncover the elegant mathematical tools that bridge fundamental physics with cutting-edge drone technology. Whether you're interested in geometry, control theory, or just fascinated by the math behind autonomous systems, this talk will offer a compelling journey from theory to application in the skies.
Wednesday September 3, 2025
Friday September 5, 2025
Wednesday September 10, 2025
Friday October 17, 2025