In the first part of the talk, I'll review the classical theory of coadjoint orbits including the Kirillov-Kostant-Souriau symplectic structure, Duistermaat-Heckman oscillating integrals and equivariant localization. In the second part, I'll talk about coadjoint orbits of Virasoro algebra, the Schwarzian action and infinite dimensional orbital integrals. If time permits, we will touch upon recent applications of coadjoint orbits to ideas of holography in physics. The talk is based on a joint work with S. Shatashvili. To attend our online seminar, use the link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Mirosław Lachowicz (MIMUW)
Integro-differential Equations and Beautiful Catastrophes
Pokażę, że wybuchy rozwiązań, traktowane często przez matematyków, jako coś złego, mogą w rzeczywistości opisywać różnego typu samoorganizację - ,,pozytywna'' (np. wyzdrowienie), lub ,,negatywną'' (polaryzacja społeczeństwa). Matematycznie jest to teoria równań różniczkowo-całkowych zastosowana do zagadnień z nauk społecznych (ustalanie się opinii), ekonomii (zagadnienie ,,cytryn i wisienek''), biologii (denaturacja DNA), medycyny (gojenie się zerwanych ścięgien) i rozmieszczenie osób w windzie. Aby brać udział na seminar, prosimy o skorzystanie z następnego link do Zooma: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
I am going to show, that blow-ups of solutions, that usually are treated as something very bad, can in fact describe some self-organization phenomena, "positive" (like healing) or "negative" (like society polarization). Mathematically it is going to be the theory of integro-differential equations that is applied to processes in Social Sciences (opinion formation), Economics ("lemons and cherries" theory), Biology (DNA denaturation), Medicine (tendon healing process - collagen remodelling) and the redistribution in a lift. To attend the seminar, please use the Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09 Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Marius Lemm (EPFL)
Quantum spin systems are many-body models which are of wide interest in modern physics and at the same time amenable to rigorous mathematical analysis. A central question about a quantum spin system is whether its Hamiltonian exhibits a spectral gap above the ground state. The existence of such a spectral gap has far-reaching consequences, e.g., for the ground state correlations. In this talk, we survey recent progress on deriving spectral gaps for frustration-free quantum spin systems in dimensions greater than 1, including in the antiferromagnetic models of Affleck-Kennedy-Lieb-Tasaki (AKLT). To attend the seminar, use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Christian Brennecke (Harvard University)
In this talk, I will consider Bose gases in a box of volume one that interact through a two-body potential with scattering length of the order $N^{-1+\kappa}$, for $\kappa >0$. For small enough $\kappa \in (0;1/43)$, slightly beyond the Gross-Pitaevskii regime (\kappa=0), I will outline a proof of Bose-Einstein condensation for low-energy states that provides bounds on the expectation and on higher moments of the number of excitations. The talk is based on joint work with A. Adhikari and B. Schlein. To attend the seminar, use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Radosław Adamczak (MIMUW)
I will describe the asymptotic behaviour of spectral measures of random G-circulant matrices, i.e., matrices corresponding to convolutions with random functions on a finite (not necessarily Abelian) group, when the order of the group tends to infinity. If time permits I will also mention asymptotic freeness for collections of independent random matrices and central limit theorems for linear eigenvalue statistics. I will conclude with some open problems. To join our online seminar, please make use of the following Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Thomas Strobl (University Lyon 1)
In the first part of the talk we will explain the notion of a singularRiemannian foliation (SRF) as a mathematical generalization of isometricgroup actions on a Riemannian manifold (M,g). We will relate this inparticular to constrained dynamical systems on T*M, where the definingcondition between the foliation on M and the metric g appears as acompatibility condition of first class constraints with the naturalHamiltonian flow generated by g. In the second part of the talk we will show how to construct gaugetheories beyond the standard use of group actions. A simple prototype ofsuch a gauge theory is the Poisson sigma model, which we will brieflyrecall in this context. However, this theory is defined in twodimensions only and, more importantly, is topological (thus in somesense "unphysical"). We show how the use of SRFs permits to constructgauge theories in arbitrary spacetime dimensions with propagatingdegrees of freedom. Replacing the notion of a quadratic Lie algebra,used to define standard Yang-Mills theories, by quadratic Liealgebroids, we will be led to what we call Curved Yang-Mills-Higgs GaugeTheories as a generalization of the Yang-Mills-Higgs sector of the Standard Model of particle physics. To join our online seminar, use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Torben Heinrich Krüger (University of Copenhagen)
The empirical spectral distribution of a non-hermitian random matrix concentrates around a deterministic probability distribution on the complex plane as its dimension increases. Despite the inherent spectral instability of such models, this approximation is valid all the way down to local scales just above the typical eigenvalue spacing distance. We will give an overview over some basic questions and techniques associated with the study of spectra for non-hermitian random matrices. Furthermore, we will present recent results for matrices with correlated entries and their application to systems of randomly coupled differential equations that are used to model a wide range of disordered dynamical systems ranging from neural networks to food webs. To join our online seminar, use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Ewelina Zatorska (Imperial College London)
In this talk I will present the recent developments in the topic of existence of solutions to the two-fluid systems. The compensated compactness technique of P.-L. Lions and E. Feireisl for single-component fluids has certain limitations, distinctly in the context of multi-component flow models. A particular example of such model is two-fluids Stokes system with single velocity field and two densities, and with an algebraic pressure law closure. The first result that I will present is the existence of weak solutions for such system, using compactness criterion introduced recently by D. Bresch and P.-E. Jabin. I will also outline an innovative construction of solutions relying on the G. Crippa and C. DeLellis stability estimates for the transport equation. In the last part of my talk I will relate to a couple of more recent results: existence of solutions to one-dimensional system, non-uniqueness of solutions to inviscid system, and I will comment on issues around weak-strong uniqueness. To attend our online seminar, please use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Wojciech de Roeck (KU Leuven)
In the last decade, there has been quite some work on proofs of quantization of Hall conductance (in interacting systems). In particular, the work of Hastings and Michalakis provided a breakthrough perspective.In a few papers with Bachmann, Bols and Fraas, we developed a related approach that seems somehow shorter. I will try to discuss all this, realizing of course that the audience is not familiar with the subject. Our work also provides an explicit route from Hamiltonian models to topological quantum field theories and I will try to explain this as well. Finally, I could talk about more recent work on generalizing the concept of Thouless pumps to charges that are not related to a U(1) symmetry. To attend our online seminar, please use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Jakub Zieliński (ICM)
Epidemic models. An overview of different mathematical methods
W trakcie seminarium przedstawione zostaną najważniejsze klasy modelistosowanych w epidemiologii: modele wykorzystujące równania różniczkowe,wzmianka o modelach opartych o metody grafowe, modele agentowe. Wdrugiej części omówiony zostanie model agentowy opracowany w ICM UW w celu opisu epidemii wirusa SARS-CoV-2. Seminarium się odbędzie na ZOOM korzystając z identyfikatora: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
In this talk we will present the most important types of models applied in epidemiology: models using differential equations, models based on graph methods, and agent models. During the second part of the talk, an agent model developed by the ICM UW so as to describe the epidemic caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2 is to be analysed. To attend our online seminar, please use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Andrew Bruce (University of Luxembourg)
Loosley, a Courant algebroid is a vector bundle with a Loday-Leibniz bracket and a nondegenerate bilinear form on its space of sections together with some compatibility conditions. Following Roytenburg it is known that Courant algebroids have a neat supermanifold formulation as 'symplectic Lie 2-algebroids'. Without details, we have a graded symplectic supermanifold and an odd Hamiltonian that is homological, i.e., {\theta, \theta} =0. In this talk, I will show how pre-Courant algebroids, so 'Courant algebroids' without the Jacobi identity, have a very similar formulation as 'symplectic almost Lie 2-algebroids'. In particular we condition on the odd Hamiltonian is relaxed to be {{\theta, \theta},f} =0 for weight/degree zero functions. We will explore some of the consequences of this reformulation, including how to describe pre-Courant algebroids with an additional compatible non-negative grading. Examples of what we refer to as weighted pre-Courant algebroids include Courant algebroids in the category of vector bundles.As a side remark, Courant algebroids and their relatives have made a resurgence in theoretical physics via double field theory.Based on Andrew James Bruce & Janusz Grabowski, Pre-Courant algebroids, Journal of Geometry and Physics 142 (2019) 254-273. To attend our online seminar, please use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09
Zapraszamy na spotkanie o godzinie 10:15

Marcin Zając (KMMF)
Locally conformal symplectic (lcs) manifolds have a veryinteresting geometry and provide a natural generalisation of asymplectic structure. It turns out that the generic example of a lcsmanifold is given by a cotangent bundle of a manifold, equipped withcertain closedone-form being a pull-back of a one-from on a base manifold. In my talkI will present main features of dynamics on locally conformal symplecticmanifolds and present a geometrical version of Hamilton-Jacobi theory forthis kind of structure. To attend our online seminar, please use the Zoom identificator: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8145917621?pwd=bVVKend0SHFKNUNyUUQ4cWNRK3laZz09