Previous events - Page 121

Time and place: , NHA 935

Microfluidics of sugar transport in plants

Plants can rightly be called masters of microengineering. Their survival and successful reproduction depends on their ability to overcome a series of physical challenges during growth and when transporting matter over great distances. In this talk, we focus on the microfluidic network responsible for energy distribution (the phloem). We combine experiments on living plants and biomimetic microfluidic devices to elucidate the basic physical principles that govern sugar transport in plants. We derive a scaling relation between the characteristic sizes of the plant organs, which optimizes the rate of sugar transport. Comparison with experimental data suggests that the pipe network is operating at or near the theoretical optimum. We further consider the coupling between photosynthesis and long-distance transport. While sap with high sugar concentration has the greatest transport potential, viscosity impedes flow, a phenomena analogous to congestion in traffic flows. The optimal sugar concentration for transport in plants is 25%, sweeter than Coke (10%) but much less viscous than maple syrup (65%). Although plants have generally evolved towards the theoretical optimum, a number of unusually sweet plants exist. This group consists primarily of crop plants such as corn (40%) and potato (50%), sugar junkies of the natural world.

Time and place: , Cinemateket, Dronningens gate 16, Oslo

Velkommen til filmvisning av kritikerroste Ex Machina og foredrag om engstelse for den kvinnelige roboten og hvordan denne filmen henger sammen med oldtidens mytologier og religion. Få med deg det første Science of Fiction-arrangementet.

Time and place: , Rom 304 (peisestua), Svein Rosselands hus

Masterprogrammet i astronomi har sin årlige masterorientering der fagmiljøene ved instituttet presenterer seg og informerer om mulige masterprosjekter/masteroppgaver.

Time:

Prof Per Mykland (University of Chicago) will give a seminar in the lunch area, 8th floor Niels Henrik Abels hus at 14:15.

Time and place: , B 638

In this talk I will explain how the use of functors defined on the category I of finite sets and injections makes it possible to replace E-infinity objects by strictly commutative ones. For example, an E-infinity space can be replaced by a strictly commutative monoid in I-diagrams of spaces. The quasi-categorical version of this result is one building block for an interesting rigidification result about multiplicative homotopy theories: we show that every presentably symmetric monoidal infinity-category is represented by a symmetric monoidal model category. (This is based on joint work with C. Schlichtkrull, with D. Kodjabachev, and with T. Nikolaus)   

Time and place: , Rom 304 (Peisestua), Institutt for teoretisk astrofysikk

Clara Froment, Postdoc , ITA

Time and place: , Auditorium 2, 3.floor, Farmasibygningen (School of Pharmacy), UiO

Join us on PharmaTox open seminar series.

Attendance is free and open for everybody. Registration is required.

Time and place: , B638, NH Abels hus
Time and place: , B81
Time and place: , B 638

Given a Nisnevich sheaf (on smooth schemes of finite type) of spectra, there exists a universal process of making it 𝔸1-invariant, called 𝔸1-localization. Unfortunately, this is not a stalkwise process and the property of being stalkwise a connective spectrum may be destroyed. However, the 𝔸1-connectivity theorem of Morel shows that this is not the case when working over a field. We report on joint work with Johannes Schmidt and sketch our approach towards the following theorem: Over a Dedekind scheme with infinite residue fields, 𝔸1-localization decreases the stalkwise connectivity by at most one. As in Morel’s case, we use a strong geometric input which is a Nisnevich-local version of Gabber’s geometric presentation result over a henselian discrete valuation ring with infinite residue field.  

Time and place: , B 637 NHA

The advances on the Milnor- and Bloch-Kato conjectures have led to a good  understanding of motivic cohomology and algebraic K-theory with finite  coefficients.  However, important questions remain about rational motivic  cohomology and algebraic K-theory, including the Beilinson-Soulé vanishing  conjecture.  We discuss how the speaker's "connectivity conjecture" for  the stable rank filtration of algebraic K-theory leads to the construction  of chain complexes whose cohomology groups may compute rational motivic  cohomology, and simultaneously satisfy the vanishing conjecture.  These  "rank complexes" serve a similar purpose as Goncharov's candidates for  motivic complexes, but have the advantage that they have a precise  relation to rational algebraic K-theory.

Time and place: , Auditorium 1, the Geology building

Thomas Schellenberger at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Analysis of glacier surface velocity using repeat Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images

Time and place: , Rom 304 (Peisestua), Institutt for teoretisk astrofysikk

Tone Bratteteig, Professor - Research Group for Design of Information Systems

Time and place: , Auditorium 1, the Geology building

Doctoral candidate Thomas Schellenberger at the Department of Geosciences will give a trial lecture on the given topic: Ice and Oceans: The impact of a melting cryosphere on ocean circulation

Time and place: , B638, NH Abels hus
Time and place: , B 738

The so-called Koras-Russell threefolds are a family of topologically

contractible rational smooth complex affine threefolds which played an

important role in the linearization problem for multiplicative group

actions on the affine 3-space. They are known to be all diffeomorphic to

the 6-dimensional Euclidean space, but it was shown by Makar-Limanov in

the nineties that none of them are algebraically isomorphic to the affine

3-space. It is however not known whether they are stably isomorphic or not

to an affine space. Recently, Hoyois, Krishna and Østvær proved that many

of these varieties become contractible in the unstable A^1-homotopy

category of Morel and Voevodsky after some finite suspension with the

pointed projective line. In this talk, I will explain how additional

geometric properties related to additive group actions on such varieties

allow to conclude that a large class of them are actually A^1-contractible

(Joint work with Jean Fasel, Université Grenoble-Alpes).

Time and place: , Rom 304 (Peisestua), Institutt for teoretisk astrofysikk

Tomi Koivisto, NORDITA

Time and place: , NHA bygget 9 etg B91

Digital signalbehandling og bildeanalyse, UiO and PGS

The effects of moving rough sea surfaces on seismic data.

Time and place: , B81

Andreas Andersson (UiO): An introduction to duality for compact groups in algebraic quantum field theory

Time:

Tamara Broderick (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) will give a seminar in the lunch area, 8th floor Niels Henrik Abels hus at 14:15.

Time and place: , B 738

In this talk, we will present some applications of the "transfer" to

algebraic K-theory, inspired by the work of Thomason. Let A --> B be a

G-Galois extension of rings, or more generally of E-infinity ring spectra

in the sense of Rognes. A basic question in algebraic K-theory asks how

close the map K(A) --> K(B)^hG is to being an equivalence, i.e., how close

K is to satisfying Galois descent. Motivated by the classical descent

theorem of Thomason, one also expects such a result after "periodic"

localization. We formulate and prove a general lemma that enables one to

translate rational descent statements as above into descent statements

after telescopic localization. As a result, we prove various descent

results in the telescopically localized K-theory, TC, etc. of ring

spectra, and verify several cases of a conjecture of Ausoni-Rognes. This

is joint work with Dustin Clausen, Niko Naumann, and Justin Noel.

Time and place: , Rom 304 (Peisestua), Institutt for teoretisk astrofysikk

Morten Bo Madsen, Associate Professor, Astrophysics and Planetary Science, Niels Bohr Institute

Time and place: , B 738

The Bass-Quillen conjecture states that every vector bundle over A^n_R is

extended from Spec(R) for a regular noetherian ring R. In 1981, Lindel

proved that this conjecture has an affirmative solution when R is

essentially of finite type over a field. We will discuss an equivariant

version of this conjecture for the action of a reductive group.  When R =

C, this is called the equivariant Serre problem and has been studied by

authors like Knop, Kraft-Schwarz, Masuda-Moser-Jauslin-Petrie. In this

talk, we will be interested in the case when R is a more general regular

ring. This is based on joint work with Amalendu Krishna

Time and place: , Auditorium 1, the Geology building

Mohammad Koochak Zadeh at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Compaction and rock properties of siliciclastic sediments- Implications for reservoir characterization, velocity anisotropy and buildup of abnormal pore pressure

Time and place: , Rom 304 (Peisestua), Institutt for teoretisk astrofysikk

Michal Michalowski, Royal Observatory Edinburgh, School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Edinburgh