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Monday, February 8, 2021 11:30 am - 11:30 am EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Graph Theory Seminar - Mark Kempton

Title: Cospectral Vertices and Isospectral Reductions

Speaker: Mark Kempton
Affiliation: Brigham Young University
Zoom: Contact Soffia Arnadottir

Abstract:

Understanding cospectral vertices in graphs is fundamental to understanding what the spectrum of the adjacency matrix can tell us about a graph.  Furthermore, cospectral vertices are necessary in constructions of graphs exhibiting perfect quantum state transfer.  I will talk about how to recognize cospectral vertices via a tool from network dynamics: the isospectral reduction of a graph.  I will explore possible ways of getting new constructions of cospectral vertices by looking at isospectral reductions.

Thursday, February 11, 2021 1:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Combinatorics Seminar - Julien Courtiel

Title: Solving Prellberg and Mortimer's conjecture - bijection(s)
between Motzkin paths and triangular walks

Speaker: Julien Courtiel
Affiliation: Université de Caen
Zoom: Contact Karen Yeats

Abstract:

In these difficult times, what we need to feel better is some colorful and elegant bijections.

This talk introduces the work we did with Andrew Elvey-Price (Tours, France) and Irène Marcovici (Nancy, France). Together we answered an open question from Mortimer and Prellberg, asking for a bijection between a family of walks inside a bounded triangular domain (think about a large equilateral triangle subdivided in several smaller equilateral triangles) and the famous Motzkin paths, but which have bounded height.

Friday, February 12, 2021 3:30 pm - 3:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Tutte Colloquium - Robert Hildebrand

Title: Mixed Integer Programming - Strength of adding integer variables

Speaker: Robert Hildebrand
Affliation: Virginia Tech
Zoom: Please email Emma Watson

Abstract:

Mixed Integer Programming is the problem of optimizing a multi-variate function over some domain constraints where some variables are required to take integer values. From a complexity-theoretic perspective,  problems with fewer integer variables are easier to solve. However, this is not always the case in practice.  We will discuss how performance can be improved when adding integer variables in the context of cutting planes and branch and bound. We will compare several frameworks for doing so in both the context of converting lifting integer and continuous variables to more variables.  We will conclude with recent work on mixed-integer quadratic programming and mention some computational results.

Monday, February 22, 2021 6:00 pm - 6:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Graph Theory Seminar - Gordon Royle

*Note different start time

Title: Real Chromatic Roots of Graphs

Speaker: Gordon Royle
Affiliation: The University of Western Australia
Zoom: Contact Soffia Arnadottir

Abstract:

In February 1988, I arrived at C&O Waterloo for a postdoc with the late Ron Read. He handed me a paper by Beraha, Kahane and Weiss, and told me to apply it to determining the location of the complex roots of chromatic polynomials.  I’ve returned to the topic every few years since then, with varying degrees of success---some positive results, but still many open problems and conjectures remain.

Thursday, February 25, 2021 1:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Combinatorics Seminar - Nick Loehr

Title: Chain decompositions for q,t-Catalan numbers

Speaker: Nick Loehr
Affiliation: Virginia Tech
Zoom: Contact Karen Yeats

Abstract:

The q,t-Catalan numbers Cat_n(q,t) are polynomials in q and t that reduce to the ordinary Catalan numbers when q=t=1. These polynomials have important connections to representation theory, algebraic geometry, and symmetric functions. Work of Garsia, Haglund, and Haiman has given us combinatorial formulas for Cat_n(q,t) as sums of Dyck vectors weighted by area and dinv. This talk narrates our ongoing quest for a bijective proof of the notorious symmetry property Cat_n(q,t)=Cat_n(t,q).

Friday, February 26, 2021 3:30 pm - 3:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Tutte Colloquium - Robert Morris

Title: Flat Littlewood Polynomials Exist

Speaker: Robert Morris
Affliation: IMPA (Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada)
Zoom: Please email Emma Watson

Abstract:

In a Littlewood polynomial, all coefficients are either 1 or -1. Littlewood proved many beautiful theorems about these polynomials over his long life, and in his 1968 monograph he stated several influential conjectures about them. One of the most famous of these was inspired by a question of Erdos, who asked in 1957 whether there exist "flat" Littlewood polynomials of degree n, that is, with |P(z)| of order n^{1/2} for all (complex) z with |z| = 1. 

Monday, March 1, 2021 11:30 am - 11:30 am EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Graph Theory Seminar - Hamed Karami

Title: Perfect Colorings of the Generalized Petersen Graphs

Speaker: Hamed Karami
Affiliation: Iran University of Science and Technology
Zoom: Contact Soffia Arnadottir

Abstract:

For a graph G and an integer m, a mapping T:V(G) -> {1,...,m} is called a perfect m-coloring with matrix A=(a_ij), i,j \in {1,...,m}, if it is surjective, and for all i,j, for every vertex of color i, the number of its neighbors of color j is equal to a_ij. There is another term for this concept in literature as "equitable partition". In this talk, we present some important results about enumerating parameter matrices of all perfect 2-colorings and perfect 3-colorings of generalized Petersen graphs GP(n,k).

Thursday, March 4, 2021 1:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Algebraic Combinatorics Seminar - Ralph Kaufmann

Title: Graphs and combinatorics with a relationship to algebra, geometry and physics

Speaker: Ralph Kaufmann
Affiliation: Purdue
Zoom: Contact Karen Yeats

Abstract:

Several algebraic and geometric structures are most naturally encoded via graphs. These include restrictions, such as trees, and decorations, such as planar graphs, ribbon graphs, bi-partite graphs (aka. hypergraphs), directed versions, etc. Particularly nice properties satisfy some kind of hereditary condition. This affords a dual perspective. Either as (nested) subsets and decomposition, or as composition, gluing locally. Both views relate to category theory, algebra, and combinatorics in terms of finite sets, cospans etc. We will give examples of these phenomena and provide a general background.

Thursday, March 4, 2021 4:00 pm - 4:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

C&O + PMath Joint Colloquium: Lukas Nabergall

Title: The Erdos-Szekeres theorem 

Speaker: Lukas Nabergall
Affiliation: University of Waterloo
Zoom: Contact Maxwell Levit

Abstract: 

What lies at the intersection of combinatorial geometry, graph theory, order theory, analysis, and statistics? Why, only one of the most beautiful theorems you may have never heard of. Let me take you on a journey from early 20th century Budapest through to the heights of modern mathematics and show you why this classic result of Erdos and Szekeres is worth adding to your mathematical repertoire. Along the way we'll even see a proof so good it must come from The Book.

Friday, March 5, 2021 3:30 pm - 3:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Tutte Colloquium -Debbie Leung

Title: The embezzlement of entanglement and its applications

Speaker: Debbie Leung
Affliation: University of Waterloo
Zoom: Please email Emma Watson

Abstract:

Embezzlement of entanglement is the (impossible) task of producing an entangled state from a product state via a local change of basis, when a suitable *catalytic* entangled state is available.

The possibility to approximate this task was first observed by van Dam and Hayden in 2002.  Since then, the phenomenon is found to play crucial roles in many aspects of quantum information theory.  In this talk, we will discuss aspects of embezzlement and some applications (such as why quantum correlations do not form a closed set, and why there are nonlocal games that cannot be played optimally with a finite amount of entanglement, and why additive quantities cannot be more than asymptotically continuous).