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Seminario Matematico e Fisico di Milano
Piazza Leonardo da Vinci, 32 - 20133 Milano
Direttore: Paolo Stellari
      
Vice Direttore: Gabriele Grillo
      
Segretario: Giona Veronelli

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Tai-Ping Liu, Academia Sinica, Taiwan and Stanford University
Wave propagation over shock profiles
Venerdì 11 Dicembre 2015, ore 15:00
Aula U5-3014, Dipartimento di Matematica e Applicazioni Via R. Cozzi, 53 Milano
Abstract
 
Gavril Farkas, Humboldt Universitat Berlin
What are abelian varieties of dimension six?
Venerdì 04 Dicembre 2015, ore 14:00
Sala di rappresentanza, Dipartimento di Matematica, Università degli Studi, Via C. Saldini 50
Abstract
 
Manuel Del Pino, Universidad de Chile
Singularity formation in elliptic and parabolic problems
Lunedì 23 Novembre 2015, ore 16:30 precise
Dipartimento di Matematica, Via Saldini, Aula Chisini
 
Alberto Bressan, Pennsylvania State University
Growing into the right shape
Lunedì 23 Novembre 2015, ore 14:00 precise
Aula U5-3014, Dipartimento di Matematica e Applicazioni Via R. Cozzi, 53 Milano
Abstract
 
David Shoikhet, College Braude and The Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Fixed Points, Semigroups and Rigidity of Holomorphic Mappings
http://www.mate.polimi.it/smf/upload/file/allegati/Fixed_poi...gidity.pdf
Giovedì 19 Novembre 2015, ore 17:00 precise
Aula seminari del 6 piano, Dipartimento di Matematica, Via Bonardi 9, Milano
 
Camillo De Lellis, Universitaet Zuerich
From Nash to Onsager, funny coincidences across differential geometry and the theory of turbulence
Lunedì 16 Novembre 2015, ore 16:30
Sala di rappresentanza, Dipartimento di Matematica, Università degli Studi, Via C. Saldini 50
Abstract
The incompressible Euler equations were derived more than 250 years ago by Euler to describe the motion of an inviscid incompressible fluid. It is known since the pioneering works of Scheffer and Shnirelman that there are nontrivial distributional solutions to these equations which are compactly supported in space and time. If they were to model the motion of a real fluid, we would see it suddenly start moving after staying at rest for a while, without any action by an external force. A celebrated theorem by Nash and Kuiper shows the existence of C1 isometric embeddings of a fixed flat rectangle in arbitrarily small balls of the threedimensional space. You should therefore be able to put a fairly large piece of paper in a pocket of your jacket without folding it or crumpling it. In a first joint work with Laszlo Szekelyhidi we pointed out that these two counterintuitive facts share many similarities. This has become even more apparent in some recent results of ours, which prove the existence of Hoelder continuous solutions that dissipate the kinetic energy. Our theorem might be regarded as a first step towards a conjecture of Lars Onsager, which in his 1949 paper about the theory of turbulence asserted the existence of such solutions for any Hoelder exponent up to 1/3. Recently, the threshold 1/5 has been reached by Philip Isett in his PhD thesis and in a joint work with Tristan Buckmaster we show that the treshold 1/3 can be achieved at the price of giving up the time-regularity.