Monday, May 25
Speakers:
Sung-Jin Oh (University of California Berkeley)
Hamed Masaood (Princeton University)
Annalaura Stingo (Ecole Polytechnique)
Pau Figueras (Queen Mary University of London)
Katrina Morgan (Northwestern University)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Theo Johnson-Freyd (Dalhousie University & Perimeter Institute)
McNamara-Wang Reconstruction
Tuesday, May 26
Speakers:
jacques smulevici (Sorbonne Université)
Sam Collingbourne (University of Edinburgh)
Gabriele Benomio (Gran Sasso Science Institute)
Pieter Blue (Univeristy of Edinburgh)
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
The mathematics of black holes: recent advances and conjectures for the future - (Lecture I: Black hole basics for mathematicians)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Wednesday, May 27
Speakers:
Nils Siemonsen (Princeton University)
Stephen Green (Perimeter Institute)
Dejan Gajic (University of Leipzig)
Lili He (Princeton University)
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Antoine Lefebvre, ENS/PSL/Sorbonne
Transport of fermions in an optical lattice
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
The mathematics of black holes: recent advances and conjectures for the future - (Lecture II: Why are black holes stable and how to prove it )
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Thursday, May 28
Speakers:
Elena Giorgi (Columbia University)
Sizheng Ma (Perimeter Institute)
Laura Sberna (University of Nottingham)
Dietrich Hafner (University of Grenoble-Alpes/University of Geneva)
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Joseph Bramante, Queen's University
$N^2$ Enhanced Quantum Detection and the CATCHY experiment
Mihalis Dafermos (Princeton University and University of Cambridge)
The mathematics of black holes: recent advances and conjectures for the future - (Lecture III: The moduli space of vacuum spacetimes in a neighbourhood of extremal black holes)
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Friday, May 29
Speakers:
Stefanos Aretakis (University of Toronto)
Marios Antonios Apetroaie (Ecole polytechnique federale de Lausanne)
Olivier Graf (Univ. Grenoble Alpes)
Georgios Moschidis (Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL))
Part of the Thematic Program on Shocks and Singularities: Nonlinear evolution equations in physical and life sciences
Paarth Jain, University of Toronto
How to Build Exact, Symmetry-Preserving Quantum Circuits
Dmitry Yarotsky (Steklov Mathematical Institute of RAS)
Gradient Flow Through Diagram Expansions: Learning Regimes and Explicit Solutions
Praveen Jayakumar, University of Toronto
Exact Unitary Transformations via Adjoint Representations

