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Research

Analysis and Partial Differential Equations

Joint Seminar Day

ProgramAbstractsOrganisers

The aim of the seminar day is to bring together specialists, early career researchers and PhD students working in analysis, partial differential equations and related fields in Australia, in order to report on research, fostering contacts and to begin new research projects between the participants.

This seminar day is organised jointly with the related research groups of the Australian National University, Macquarie University, University of Sydney, University of Wollongong, UNSW and University of Newcastle, with others participating as well.

In particular, this event has the intention to give PhD students and early career researchers the opportunity to present their research to a wider audience.

Guest speaker is Markus Haase from the University of Kiel, Germany.

Program for 20 February 2020 at the University of Sydney

To be announced

Venue:

University of Sydney (Camperdown Campus): See the information on how to get there.

Draft Program

The talks will be in the Main Quadrangle in Room S227 located next to the Nicholson Museum.

Morning Session
TimeSpeakerTitle of Talk
09:25 Opening
09:30–10:10 Markus Haase Compact group representations and the asymptotics of positive operator semigroups
10:15–10:40 Po Lam Yung Fourier decoupling and Brascamp-Lieb
10:45–11:00 Morning tea
11:00–11:25 Jiakun Liu Introduction to optimal transportation
11:30–12:55 Edward McDonald Singular traces and the density of states
12:00–12:25 Ahn Bui New Besov and Triebel-Lizorkin spaces and applications
12:30–13:30Lunch break
Afternoon Session
TimeSpeakerTitle of Talk
13:30–13:55 Maria Fărcăşeanu Semilinear elliptic equations with a Hardy potential and gradient dependent nonlinearities
14:00–14:25 Jan Rozendaal Hardy spaces for Fourier integral operators and rough wave equations
14:30–14:55 Yilin Ma Semilinear Calderón problem on complex manifolds
15:00–15:30 Afternoon Tea at SMRI
15:30–15:55 Kwok Kun Kwong Generalized convexity and some sharp comparison theorems
16:00–16:25 Paul Bryan Convex ancient solutions of hypersurface flows in the sphere
16:30 Closing

Abstracts of Talks

Talks will be posted as they become available.

Convex ancient solutions of hypersurface flows in the sphere

Paul Bryan (Macquarie University)

Abstract

I will prove a strong rigidity theorem for convex ancient hypersurface flows in the sphere, showing that for any geometric, parabolic flow the only possibilities are shrinking spherical caps.

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New Besov and Triebel-Lizorkin spaces and applications

Ahn Bui (Macquarie University)

Abstract

Let X be a space of homogeneous type and L be a nonnegative self-adjoint operator on L2(X) satisfying Gaussian upper bounds on its heat kernels. In this talk , we will present the development if the theory of Besov spaces p,qα,L(X) and Triebel–Lizorkin spaces p,qα,L(X) associated to the operator L for the full range 0 < p,q and α . Some applications will be discussed.

The talk is based on joint work with H-Q. Bui, P. D’Ancona, X. T. Duong and D. Müller.

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Semilinear elliptic equations with a Hardy potential and gradient dependent nonlinearities

Maria Fărcăşeanu (University of Sydney)

Abstract

We obtain some existence results for semilinear elliptic equations with a Hardy potential and gradient dependent nonlinearities. Furthermore, we also analyse the behaviour near zero for the positive solutions of such equations.

This is joint work with Florica Cîrstea.

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Compact group representations and the asymptotics of positive operator semigroups

Markus Haase (University of Kiel, Germany)

Abstract

A classical result by Greiner from 1982 asserts that a positive contraction semigroup on Lp converges if it has a fixed vector and one of the semigroup operators is a kernel operator. In my talk, I shall explain how this result can be obtained as a special case of a much more general convergence theorem for positive semigroups. This general result, in turn, rests on the interplay of three things: 1) a certain compactness property, 2) the fact that the real numbers are a divisible group and 3) an analogue of the classical Peter-Weyl theorem for positive representations of compact groups on atomic Banach lattices.

This is joint work with Jochen Glück.

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Generalized convexity and some sharp comparison theorems

Kwok Kun Kwong (University of Wollongong)

Abstract

I will show how generalized convexity can be used to prove the classical Toponogov triangle comparison theorem and a sharp isoperimetric type inequality involving the cut distance of a bounded domain. More precisely, I will show that among all domains with cut distance l and with a Ricci curvature lower bound (n - 1)k, the ball of radius l in the space form of curvature k has the largest area-to-volume ratio. I will also present a closely related Heintze-Karcher type inequality which relates the volume of the domain with a boundary integral involving the mean curvature. If time allows, I will give some applications of these results and another isoperimetric-type inequality involving the extrinsic radius of the domain.

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Introduction to optimal transportation

Jiakun Liu (University of Wollongong)

Abstract

In this talk, we first give a brief introduction to the optimal transport problem, and then its extension to nonlinear case and applications in geometric optics. Last, we introduce some recent results on optimal partial transport problem, which is based on joint work with Shibing Chen (USTC) and Xu-Jia Wang (ANU).

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Semilinear Calderón problem on complex manifolds

Yilin Ma (University of Sydney)

Abstract

We discuss some recent developments on extending the known results for linear Calderón problems to semilinear cases. Traditionally, the Calderón problem concerns the recovery of a potential V in the Schrodinger equation from boundary measurements based on the Dirichlet-Neumann map. For the semilinear case, we consider instead a nonlinear perturbation of the Laplacian

Δgu + V (x,u) = 0.

Assuming that the nonlinearity V (x,u) satisfies some nice properties, we can reduce the problem to a set of integral identities, from which the method of complex geometric optics applies.

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Singular traces and the density of states

Edward McDonald (University of New South Wales)

Abstract

he density of states is a non-negative measure associated to a Schrödinger operator H which is supported on its essential spectrum. Theoretical questions concerning the existence and properties of the density of states are of interest in solid state physics. We have recently found that quite generally the density of states measure can be computed by a formula involving a Dixmier trace. This is a surprising new application of singular traces to mathematical physics which uses recently developed techniques in operator integration theory.

Joint work with N. Azamov, F. Sukochev and D. Zanin.

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Hardy spaces for Fourier integral operators and rough wave equations

Jan Rozendaal (Australian National University)

Abstract

It is well known that the solution operators cos(t-Δ) and sin(t-Δ) to the classical wave equation t2u = Δu are not bounded on Lp(n), for n 2 and 1 p , unless p = 2 or t = 0. In fact, for 1 < p < these wave operators are bounded from Wsp,p(n) to Lp(n) for sp = (n - 1)|1 p -1 2|, and this exponent cannot be improved. The same boundedness property holds for the solution operators to more general wave equations with smooth coefficients, as follows from the theory of Fourier integral operators.

In this talk, I will introduce a class of Hardy spaces HFIOp(n), for 1 p , on which suitable Fourier integral operators are bounded. These spaces also satisfy Sobolev embeddings that allow one to recover the boundedness properties of Fourier integral operators on the Lp scale.

The solution operators to wave equations with rough coefficients are typically not Fourier integral operators, and little is known about their Lp mapping properties. I will also indicate how one can combine the Hardy spaces for Fourier integral operators with iterative parametrix constructions to extend the Lp regularity theory for wave equations with smooth coefficients to wave equations with rough coefficients.

This talk is based on joint work with Andrew Hassell and Pierre Portal (Australian National University), and Zhijie Fan, Naijia Liu and Liang Song (Sun Yat-Sen University, China).

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Fourier decoupling and Brascamp-Lieb

Po Lam Yung (Australian National University)

Abstract

We will begin with a brief overview of Fourier decoupling inequalities, highlighting connections to PDEs and number theory. We will then turn to some more recent work, about decoupling on quadratic 3-folds in 5, and a bilinear proof of decoupling for the moment curve on n. The former is joint work with Shaoming Guo, Changkeun Oh, Joris Roos and Pavel Zorin-Kranich; the latter is joint work with Shaoming Guo, Zane Kun Li and Pavel Zorin-Kranich.

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Organisers

  • Ben Andrews (ANU)
  • Daniel Daners (USyd, Website)
  • Ian Doust (UNSW)
  • Xuan Duong (Macquarie)
  • Daniel Hauer (USyd)
  • Ji Li (Macquarie)
  • Jiakun Liu (Wollongong)
  • James McCoy (Newcastle)
  • Pierre Portal (ANU)
  • Adam Sikora (Macquarie)
  • Glen Wheeler (Wollongong)
  • Valentina Wheeler (Wollongong)

Local Organiser: Daniel Hauer (Sydney)