Events
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Dalhousie-AARMS AAMP Seminar: Amanda Young (Technical University of Munich)
Zoom seminarTitle: A bulk gap in the presence of edge states for a HaldanepseudopotentialAbstract: In this talk, we discuss a recent result on a bulk gap for atruncated Haldane pseudopotential with maximal half filling, whichdescribes a strongly correlated system of spinless
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AARMS Scientific Machine Learning Seminar: Ben Adcock (Simon Fraser University)
WebEx seminarTitle: Tackling the curse: polynomial and deep neural network methods for function approximation in high dimensions Abstract: Many problems in computational science and engineering require the accurate approximation of a target function from data. This problem is rendered challenging by
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: James Preen (Cape Breton University)
Zoom seminarThere are many results about triangles in graphs, but the property that every edge in a graph is in at least one triangle seems not to have been studied before. The 4-regular case was quickly solved collaboratively following an internet
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Dalhousie-AARMS AAMP Seminar: Jesse Gell-Redman (University of Melbourne)
Zoom seminarTitle: A Fredholm approach to scattering Abstract: We will give a friendly introduction to the scattering theory, specifically to the matrix for Schrodinger operators. We will then discuss how a new functional analytic approach to analysis of non-elliptic equations, due to
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AARMS Scientific Machine Learning Seminar: Peter Dueben (ECMWF)
WebEx seminarThis talk provides an overview on the machine learning efforts at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), and outlines how machine learning, and in particular deep learning, could help to improve weather predictions in the coming years. The talk will
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: Sandra Kingan (Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, CUNY)
Zoom seminarI will begin by giving a general overview of what it means to find monarchs for excluded minor classes of graphs and matroids. In a paper that appeared in 2018, I used the Strong Splitter Theorem to give a short
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: Iain Moffat (Royal Holloway, University of London)
Zoom seminarSpanning Trees and Graphs Embedded in Surfaces To what extent is a graph determined by the trees contained in it? That is, if we know the edge sets of each of the spanning trees (i.e., maximal acyclic subgraphs) in a
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: Robert Kooij (Delft University of Technology)
Zoom seminarRobustness of Complex Networks Network Science aims to understand the graph structure of networks and the dynamic processes that take place on networks. Examples of processes on networks are transport of items (IP packets with digitalized information, cars, containers) and diffusion (epidemics, electric current,
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: Andrea Burgess (UNB)
Zoom seminarMutually Orthogonal Cycle Systems A $k$-cycle system of order $n$ is a set of $k$-cycles whose edges partition the edge set of $K_n$. We say that two cycle systems $\mathcal{C}$ and $\mathcal{C}'$ are {\em orthogonal} if every cycle in $\mathcal{C}$
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Atlantic Graph Theory Seminar: Melissa Huggan (Mount Allison)
Zoom seminarThe Orthogonal Colouring Game The Orthogonal Colouring Game is a combinatorial game in which two players alternately colour vertices of a pair of isomorphic graphs while respecting the properness and the orthogonality of the colouring. Each player aims to maximize
