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Abstracts

Week of October 26, 2025

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October 27, 2025
Geometry, Symmetry and Physics [3] Dual affine Robinson-Schensted correspondence via growth diagrams 4:30pm -
KT 801

Abstract: The Robinson–Schensted (RS) correspondence admits diagrammatic interpretations via Fomin’s growth diagrams and Viennot’s shadow line construction. Works of Spaltenstein, Springer, Steinberg, and van Leeuwen connected this combinatorial construction to the relative position map of Springer fibers. Motivated by Kazhdan–Lusztig cell theory, various generalizations of the Robinson–Schensted correspondence into the affine type A setting have been studied. Prominent examples include Shi’s insertion algorithm and the affine matrix ball construction by Chmutov–Pylyavskyy–Yudovina. In particular, using the affine matrix ball construction, Boixeda–Ying–Yue showed that the two-sided cells and S-cells agree when the nilpotent is of rectangular type.

In this talk, we introduce a new combinatorial construction of the affine RS correspondence via growth diagrams and shadow lines that is in a sense dual to Shi’s insertion and the affine matrix ball construction, and geometrically natural in terms of relative positions of affine flags.

Ongoing joint work with Sylvester Zhang.

October 28, 2025
Geometry & Topology [4] Branched Bending in Finite-Volume Hyperbolic Manifolds 4:30pm -
KT 203

The goal of this work is to explore and develop the machinery of branched bending in finite-volume hyperbolic n-manifolds as a means of explaining the flexibility of these manifolds. Here, we define branched bending deformations as deformations supported on a piecewise totally geodesic complex of (n-1)-dimensional faces meeting along (n-2)-dimensional branching loci. We establish a lower bound on the dimension of the deformation space of such manifolds containing a branched complex, and establish some facts about the Borromean rings as a special example (recovering a result of Menasco and Reid).

October 29, 2025
Colloquium [5] Quantitative equidistribution and the Oppenheim Conjecture 4:30pm -
KT 101

Joint work with Amir Mohammadi, Zhiren Wang, and Lei Yang

Let Q be an indefinite ternary quadratic form. In the 1980s Margulis proved the longstanding Oppenheim Conjecture, stating that unless Q is proportional to an integral form, the set of values Q attains at the integer points is dense in R. We give quantitative results to that effect.
In particular, if the coefficients of Q are algebraic, but Q is not proportional to an integral form, and if $(\alpha,\beta)$ a fixed interval, the number of integer points v in a ball of radius R for which $\alpha<Q(v)<\beta$ is asymptotic to $c(Q,\alpha,\beta)R$ as $R\to\infty$ with an effective power saving error term (but $c(Q,\alpha,\beta)$ might not be what you expect!).

Our work is based on a quantitative equidistribution result for unipotent flows, as well as upper bound estimates by Eskin-Margulis-Mozes and Wooyeon Kim. 

October 30, 2025
Analysis [6] Scalar mixing in random fluids 4:00pm -
KT 201

Abstract: Pour a drop of milk into a cup of coffee. We know from experience that after a few moments of stirring, the mixture becomes homogeneous. In this talk, we study the advection of a passive scalar (the concentration of milk) under a random fluid (coffee) velocity on the torus. We prove, when the velocity solves the 2d stochastic Navier–Stokes equations on the torus, that the scalar converges exponentially to its mean. Our result applies even when only finitely many (as few as 4) Fourier modes are randomly forced. Joint with Keefer Rowan (EPFL). 

Quantum Topology and Field Theory [7] Graph integrals on Kahler manifolds 4:30pm -
KT 801

Abstract: I will talk about my recent work with Junrong Yan. We proved the convergence of Graph integrals on analytic Kahler manifolds in the sense of Cauchy principal values, which are originally from holomorphic quantum field theories. In particular, this allows us construct geometric invariants of Calabi-Yau metrics. I will also talk about some potential applications of our results.   

References: arXiv:2507.09170, arXiv:2401.08113

Seminar webpage: https://sites.google.com/yale.edu/qtft-seminar/fall-2025 [8]

October 31, 2025
Friday Morning Seminar [9] Friday Morning Seminar 10:00am -
KT 801

We have impromptu and (sometimes) scheduled talks, on topics in probability, combinatorics, geometry, and dynamics.

Everyone is welcome! 

Visit our web site at http://math.yale.edu for updates and special announcements

Links
[1] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/list/calendar/grid/week/abstract/2025-W43 [2] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/list/calendar/grid/week/abstract/2025-W45 [3] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/geometry-symmetry-and-physics [4] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/geometry-topology [5] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/colloquium [6] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/analysis [7] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/quantum-topology-and-field-theory [8] https://nam12.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsites.google.com%2Fyale.edu%2Fqtft-seminar%2Ffall-2025&amp;data=05%7C02%7Calr34%40connect.yale.edu%7Ce043a0c2c6754d548aa108de1736b115%7Cdd8cbebb21394df8b4114e3e87abeb5c%7C0%7C0%7C638973721120893681%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=3xlIjuE3bLOxi4rlEGxKyYGDlo7FcI5NrMBOuxpiE%2FY%3D&amp;reserved=0 [9] https://calendar.math.yale.edu/seminars/friday-morning-seminar