Department Seminars & Colloquia




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For any finite point set $P \subset \mathbb{R}^d$, we denote by $\text{diam}(P)$ the ratio of the largest to the smallest distances between pairs of points in $P$. Let $c_{d, \alpha}(n)$ be the largest integer $c$ such that any $n$-point set $P \subset \mathbb{R}^d$ in general position, satisfying $\text{diam}(P) < \alpha\sqrt[d]{n}$ (informally speaking, `non-elongated'), contains a convex $c$-polytope. Valtr proved that $c_{2, \alpha}(n) \approx \sqrt[3]{n}$, which is asymptotically tight in the plane. We generalize the results by establishing $c_{d, \alpha}(n) \approx n^{\frac{d-1}{d+1}}$. Along the way we generalize the definitions and analysis of convex cups and caps to higher dimensions, which may be of independent interest. Joint work with Boris Bukh.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-11-20 21:47:45
Melchior’s Inequality (1941) implies that, in a rank-3 real-representable matroid, the average number of points in a line is less than three. This was extended to the complex-representable matroids by Hirzebruch in 1983 with the slightly weaker bound of four. In this talk, we discuss and sketch the proof of the recent result that, in a rank-4 complex-representable matroid which is not the direct-sum of two lines, the average number of points in a plane is bounded above by an absolute constant. Consequently, the average number of points in a flat in a rank-4 complex-representable matroid is bounded above by an absolute constant. Extensions of these results to higher dimensions will also be discussed. In particular, the following quantities are bounded in terms of k and r respectively: the average number of points in a rank-k flat in a complex-representable matroid of rank at least 2k-1, and the average number of points in a flat in a rank-r complex-representable matroid. Our techniques rely on a theorem of Ben Lund which approximates the number of flats of a given rank. This talk is based on joint work with Rutger Campbell and Jim Geelen.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-12-25 09:30:29
The Dedekind's Problem asks the number of monotone Boolean functions, a(n), on n variables. Equivalently, a(n) is the number of antichains in the n-dimensional Boolean lattice $[2]^n$. While the exact formula for the Dedekind number a(n) is still unknown, its asymptotic formula has been well-studied. Since any subsets of a middle layer of the Boolean lattice is an antichain, the logarithm of a(n) is trivially bounded below by the size of the middle layer. In the 1960's, Kleitman proved that this trivial lower bound is optimal in the logarithmic scale, and the actual asymptotics was also proved by Korshunov in 1980’s. In this talk, we will discuss recent developments on some variants of Dedekind's Problem. Based on joint works with Matthew Jenssen, Alex Malekshahian, Michail Sarantis, and Prasad Tetali.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-11-17 01:04:41
We present the KKM theorem and a recent proof method utilizing it that has proven to be very useful for problems in discrete geometry. For example, the method was used to show that for a planar family of convex sets with the property that every three sets are pierced by a line, there are three lines whose union intersects each set in the family. This was previously a long-unsolved problem posed by Eckhoff. We go over a couple of examples demonstrating the method and propose a potential future research direction to push the method even further.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-12-25 09:28:56
A graph is $H$-Ramsey if every two-coloring of its edges contains a monochromatic copy of $H$. Define the $F$-Ramsey number of $H$, denoted by $r_F(H)$, to be the minimum number of copies of $F$ in a graph which is $H$-Ramsey. This generalizes the Ramsey number and size Ramsey number of a graph. Addressing a question of Spiro, we prove that \[r_{K_3}(K_t)=\binom{r(K_t)}3\] for all sufficiently large $t$.  Our proof involves a combination of results on the chromatic number of triangle-sparse graphs. Joint work with Jacob Fox and Jonathan Tidor.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-12-07 15:27:19
Given a set of lines in $\mathbb R^d$, a joint is a point contained in d linearly independent lines. Guth and Katz showed that N lines can determine at most $O(N^{3/2})$ joints in $\mathbb R^3$ via the polynomial method. Yu and I proved a tight bound on this problem, which also solves a conjecture proposed by Bollobás and Eccles on the partial shadow problem. It is surprising to us that the only known proof of this purely extremal graph theoretic problem uses incidence geometry and the polynomial method.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-11-01 15:41:44
TBD
ZOOM ID: 997 8258 4700 (Biomedical Mathematics Online Colloquium), (pw: 1234) + Google Map
Host: Jae Kyoung Kim     English     2023-10-16 11:01:32
The Nagata Conjecture governs the minimal degree required for a plane algebraic curve to pass through a collection of $r$ general points in the projective plane $P^2$ with prescribed multiplicities. The "SHGH" Conjecture governs the dimension of the linear space of these polynomials. We formulate transcendental versions of these conjectures in term of pluripotential theory and we're making some progress.
Host: Nguyen Ngoc Cuong     To be announced     2023-11-21 10:54:17
For $d\ge 2$ and an odd prime power $q$, let $\mathbb{F}_q^d$ be the $d$-dimensional vector space over the finite field $\mathbb{F}_q$. The distance between two points $(x_1,\ldots,x_d)$ and $(y_1,\ldots,y_d)$ is defined to be $\sum_{i=1}^d (x_i-y_i)^2$. An influential result of Iosevich and Rudnev is: if $E \subset \mathbb{F}_q^d$ is sufficiently large and $t \in \mathbb{F}_q$, then there are a pair of points $x,y \in E$ such that the distance between $x$ and $y$ is $t$. Subsequent works considered embedding graphs of distances, rather than a single distance. I will discuss joint work with Debsoumya Chakraborti, in which we show that every sufficiently large subset of $\mathbb{F}_q^d$ contains every nearly spanning tree of distances with bounded degree in each distance. The main novelty in this result is that the distance graphs we find are nearly as large as the set $S$ itself, but even for smaller distance trees our work leads to quantitative improvements to previously known bounds. A key ingredient in our proof is a new colorful generalization of a classical result of Haxell on finding nearly spanning bounded-degree trees in expander graphs. This is joint work with Debsoumya Chakraborti.
Host: Sang-il Oum     English     2023-11-29 15:43:04