Volume 185
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Event Schedule
Events for the 3rd week of February 2022
2022-02-09
Monday, February 14, 13:00– 17:30 Workshop: Towards the Use of Data Assimilation for COVID-19 Investigations
Monday, February 14, 15:00– 17:30 Workshop: MACS Colloquium
Tuesday, February 15, 13:30– 15:00 NEW WG Seminar
Friday, February 18, 12:30- 13:30 Coffee Meeting
Friday, February 18, 14:00- 15:00 ABBL/iTHEMS Astro Seminar
Friday, February 18, 16:30- 18:00 Seminar: iTHEMS - R-CCS(FTRT) Joint Online Seminar: Second order chiral phase transition in three flavor quantum chromodynamics?
Hot Topic
SSH Seminar "When high-school mathematics is useful in biology" was held on February 4, 2022
2022-02-08
On February 4th, 2022, Ryosuke Iritani gave an online lecture on mathematical biology, entitled “高校で学ぶ数学が生物研究で活きるとき”(“when high-school mathematics is useful in biology”) for a Super Science High-school program at Takatsuki Junior and Senior High School. I started off with how a scientific career develops and what it is like to work as a scientist. I then delved into a scientific world, and demonstrated high school mathematics is a powerful tool to research in biology, drawing examples from the Fibonacci series in genetics, Price equation using recursive equations, game theory with matrix algebra, and kin selection theory for ants' society. I closed the talk with an encouragement for the motivated, budding scientists, that learning and studying are both extremely fun. I thank Kanda-sensei for inviting me to such a fantastic opportunity, as well as Suri-Joshi for giving me the opportunity to write an article that made this lecture possible by drawing Kanda-sensei's attention!
Reported by Ryosuke Iritani
Upcoming Events
Seminar
iTHEMS Biology Seminar
Stochastic operators: properties and applications
February 10 (Thu) at 10:00 - 11:00, 2022
Gilberto Nakamura (Postdoctoral Researcher, iTHEMS)
Stochastic processes are widely used to model systems in which one or more variables fluctuate randomly. Problems arise when large sets of random variables are allowed to interact with each other, as is often the case with physical and biological systems. Stochastic operators provide a convenient framework for describing the interactions and evolution of the random variables. In this talk, I will discuss techniques and methods typically used in spin systems to deal with stochastic operators and their spectral analysis in the context of random processes. I will briefly review their properties and applications to biological systems. As practical examples, I will present some results of my research in infectious diseases and migration of glioma cells.
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
Workshop
Co-hosted by iTHEMS
Towards the Use of Data Assimilation for COVID-19 Investigations
February 14 (Mon) at 13:00 - 17:30, 2022
Catherine Beauchemin (Deputy Program Director, iTHEMS)
Takemasa Miyoshi (Team Leader, Data Assimilation Research Team, RIKEN Center for Computational Science (R-CCS))
This workshop aims to present recent investigations related to mathematical modeling of COVID-19 spread and impacts, and to foster the use of data assimilation techniques in future studies. It also aims to facilitate interactions and discussions among researchers from different fields such as epidemiology, economics, and mathematics. This workshop is jointly hosted by RIKEN Data Assimilation Research Team and by Nagoya University Graduate School of Mathematics, and supported by FY2021 RIKEN President's Discretionary Funds for COVID-19. A hybrid meeting is planned, but depending on the situation, an online version will be organized. Young researchers and students are encouraged to attend.
Program:
13:00 - 13:10 Opening
13:10 - 14:00 Hiroshi Nishiura (Kyoto University)
(35 min + 15 min Q&A) TBD
14:00 - 14:50 Catherine Beauchemin (RIKEN iTHEMS)
(35 min + 15 min Q&A) The straight line: simple and effective
14:50 - 15:10 Break
15:10 - 16:00 Taisuke Nakata (The University of Tokyo)
(35 min + 15 min Q&A) Balancing NPIs and Economic Activities
16:00 - 16:50 Qiwen Sun (RIKEN Data Assimilation Research Team, Nagoya University)
(35 min + 15 min Q&A) Analysis of COVID-19 in Japan with Extended SEIR model and ensemble Kalman filter
16:50 - 17:30 Discussion
Venue: Hybrid Format (RIKEN R-CCS room 107 and Zoom)
Event Official Language: English
Colloquium
MACS ColloquiumSupported by iTHEMS
The 18th MACS Colloquium
February 14 (Mon) at 15:00 - 17:30, 2022
Tetsuya Nagata (Professor, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)
15:00- Talk by Prof. Tetsuya Nagata
16:05- 2021 MACS Result Briefing
16:30- Discussion
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: Japanese
Seminar
NEW WG Seminar
False vacuum decay in the Lorentzian path integral
February 15 (Tue) at 13:30 - 15:00, 2022
Takumi Hayashi (Ph.D. Student, Research Center for the Early Universe (RESCEU), The University of Tokyo)
False vacuum decay is a non-perturbative phenomenon in quantum field theory and important quantum process in cosmology. It has relied on the Euclidean formalism developed by Coleman, but there are several subtle issues in cosmological application as a negative mode problem or ambiguity in the definition of the decay rate in the presence of the gravity. Instead of the Euclidean path integral, we directly evaluate the Lorentzian path integral to discuss false vacuum decay and estimate the decay probability. To make the Lorentzian path integral convergent, the deformation of an integral contour is performed on the basis of the Picard-Lefschetz theory. We show that the nucleation probability of a critical bubble, for which the corresponding bounce action is extremized, has the same exponent as the Euclidean approach. We also extend our computation to the nucleation of a bubble larger or smaller than the critical one to which the Euclidean formalism is not applicable.
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
Seminar
ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar
Spin transport in ultracold atomic gases
February 18 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2022
Yuta Sekino (Postdoctoral Researcher, Astrophysical Big Bang Laboratory, RIKEN Cluster for Pioneering Research (CPR))
In condensed matter physics, transport measurement has played crucial roles in understanding fascinating phenomena such as superconductivity and quantum Hall and Kondo effects. In this talk, we discuss the usefulness of spin transport as a probe for many-body properties in ultracold atoms. In the first part, we focus on the conductivity of alternating spin current, which includes information on superfluid gap, pseudogap, and topological phase transition. In the latter part, we consider mesoscopic spin transport between two Fermi gases weakly connected with each other. Our analysis suggests that the spin current is sensitive to whether the gases have pseudogaps, which are gap-like structures in densities of states just above the superfluid transition temperature. In this talk, we also mention similarities of ultracold atoms to neutron star matter.
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
Seminar
iTHEMS - R-CCS(FTRT) Joint Online Seminar: Second order chiral phase transition in three flavor quantum chromodynamics?
February 18 (Fri) at 16:30 - 18:00, 2022
Gergely Fejos (Assistant Professor, Institute of Physics, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary)
We calculate the renormalization group flows of all renormalizable interactions in the three dimensional Ginzburg--Landau potential for the chiral phase transition of three flavor quantum chromodynamics [1]. On the contrary to the common belief we find a fixed point in the system that is able to describe a second order phase transition in the infrared. This shows that longstanding assumptions on the transition order might be false. If the transition is indeed of second order, our results can also be interpreted as indirect evidence that the axial anomaly restores at the transition temperature.
Reference
- G. Fejos, Second order chiral phase transition in three flavor quantum chromodynamics?, High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (2022), arXiv: 2201.07909
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
External Event
RIKEN Day: Let's Talk with Researchers! "Listening to the Ringing of a Black Hole"
February 25 (Fri) at 18:00 - 18:30, 2022
Naritaka Oshita (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, iTHEMS)
In the February RIKEN Day, we will have a talk with Naritaka Oshita, a researcher who is researching on the theme of "Listening to the Ringing of a Black Hole."
See related links for details.
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: Japanese
Paper of the Week
Week 2, February 2022
2022-02-09
Title: The double detonation of a double degenerate system, from Type Ia supernova explosion to its supernova remnant
Author: Gilles Ferrand, Ataru Tanikawa, Donald C. Warren, Shigehiro Nagataki, Samar Safi-Harb, Anne Decourchelle
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.04268v1
Title: Detecting Preformed-Pair Current through Nonequilibrium Noise in the BCS--BEC Crossover
Author: Hiroyuki Tajima, Daigo Oue, Mamoru Matsuo, Takeo Kato
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.03873v1
Title: Delocalized spectra of Landau operators on helical surfaces
Author: Yosuke Kubota, Matthias Ludewig, Guo Chuan Thiang
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2201.05416v1
Title: Bounds in Nonequilibrium Quantum Dynamics
Author: Zongping Gong, Ryusuke Hamazaki
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.02011v1
Title: Universal constraint on nonlinear population dynamics
Author: Kyosuke Adachi, Ryosuke Iritani, Ryusuke Hamazaki
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.02028v1
Title: Impact of Dissipation on Universal Fluctuation Dynamics in Open Quantum Systems
Author: Kazuya Fujimoto, Ryusuke Hamazaki, Yuki Kawaguchi
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.02176v1
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