May 2018's events
COLLOQUIUM : ARAKELOV GEOMETRY - prof. GERD FALTINGS
Arakelov geometry constructs an intersection theory for arithmetic surfaces parallel to that for algebraic surface.
at 16:30 - room 7 - ground floorTommaso Lorenzi - University of St. Andrews - NONLINEAR PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS MODELLING THE MULTISCALE EVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS OF CANCER
A growing body of research indicates that mathematical modelling can complement experimental cancer research by offering alternative means of interpreting experimental data and by enabling extrapolation beyond empirical observation.
at 9:30 am - May 16, 2018 - Department of MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES - Aula BuzanoMicheal Cowling - University of New South Wales di Sydney (Cattedra Fubini) - CERTAINTY ABOUT UNCERTAINTY
Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle is the affirmation that one cannot know exactly the position and the momentum of a quantum particle.
May 16-22, 2018 at 02:00 - 05:00 p.m. Department of MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES - Aula BuzanoKeijo Ruotsalainen - University of Oulu, Finland - INTRODUCTION TO COMPRESSED SENSING
The course will be oriented to master level and PhD students with prerequisites in matrix analysis, convex analysis and Fourier analysis.
May 21, 2018 from 2.30 to 5 PM in room 1DNew Trends in Harmonic Analysis
La due giorni verrà aperta da una conferenza del prof. Michael Cowling dell’Università di New South Wales, Sydney. I lavori proseguiranno nel pomeriggio del 24 maggio e nella giornata del 25 maggio con comunicazioni della durata di 30 minuti ciascuna.
May 24-25th, 2018 - Sala Consiglio di Facoltà e Dipartimento di Scienze Matematiche, Aula BuzanoMichael Cowling - University of New South Wales (Cattedra Fubini) - ANALYSIS ON PRODUCT SPACES
This talk is a report on joint work with many others that attempts to “complete the square” by working on products of metric spaces.
May 24, 2018 at 11:00 a.m. - Sala Consiglio di FacoltàFields Medalist prof. GERD FALTINGS - ARAKELOV GEOMETRY
Arakelov geometry constructs an intersection theory for arithmetic surfaces parallel to that for algebraic surface.
May 29, 2018 at 16:30 room 8