Analysis Seminar
The analysis seminar covers a wide range of topics in analysis with particular emphasis on partial differential equations. Many of the speakers are Courant Institute visitors and postdocs. A seminar talk may cover original research or report on an interesting paper. The seminar meets on Thursdays at 11:00 am in room 1302 of Warren Weaver Hall at 251 Mercer Street, New York unless specified otherwise. Talks generally last an hour. A few special analysis seminars may be held at other times and locations.
The most reliable and inclusive list of weekly seminars and events is to be found in the weekly bulletin that is posted on a day-by-day basis on the Courant home page.
Seminar Organizer(s): The Analysis & PDE Faculty
Upcoming Events
-
Thursday, February 27, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
Bounding the Euclidean Distortion of Negative-Type Metric Spaces
Kevin Ren, Princeton University -
Thursday, March 6, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Francisco Gancedo, Universidad de Sevilla -
Thursday, March 13, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
Stability and singular limits in plasma physics
Mikaela Iacobelli, ETH Zurich -
Thursday, March 20, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Camillo De Lellis, Institute for Advanced Study -
Thursday, April 3, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Theodore Drivas, Stony Brook University -
Thursday, April 10, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Matei Coiculescu, Princeton University -
Thursday, April 24, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Ben Weinkowe, Northwestern University -
Thursday, May 1, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
TBA
Wilhelm Schlag, Yale University
Past Events
-
Thursday, February 20, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
Nearly self-similar blowup of generalized axisymmetric Navier-Stokes equations
Thomas Hou, Caltech -
Thursday, February 13, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
Gamma-convergence for the plane-to-wrinkles transition problem
Roberta Marziani, Universita di Siena -
Thursday, February 6, 202511AM, Warren Weaver Hall 1302
Global well-posedness of the stochastic Abelian-Higgs equations in two dimensions
Bjoern Bringmann, Princeton University