---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Walter Schachermayer ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 8 Feb 2006 08:42:39 +0100 From: Institut für Mathematik sekr.mathematik@univie.ac.at Subject: MathKoll. am 15.02./Prof. Warwick Tucker
Mathematisches Kolloquium
EINLADUNG
zu einem
VORTRAG
von
Prof. Dr. Warwick Tucker (Dept. of Math., Uppsala University, Sweden)
mit dem Thema:
''The Lorenz attractor exists''
Abstract: Four decades ago, the meteorologist Edward Lorenz introduced a simplified model of atmospheric dynamics in his now famous article "Deterministic Non-periodic Flow" published in the Journal of Atmospheric Sciences. The simple system of differential equations produced amazingly complicated solutions. One stunning property was that solutions starting very close together were separated at an exponential rate. This gave rise to the concept of the "butterfly effect", and seriously undermined the idea of a deterministic world. Another feature of the system was that almost all solutions tended to an invariant set on which they moved in a non-periodic fashion.
For over 35 years Lorenz' equations defied all attempts at proving that they really exhibit a so called "strange attractor". In this talk, I will present a proof of this fact, produced during my graduate studies at Uppsala University. By using a combination of pure and applied mathematics, it is possible to prove that the equations do indeed give rise to a strange attractor. Moreover, the attractor is robust, i.e., all nearby systems will display similar strange attractors. The proof has two main ingredients: rigorous numerics - which produces information about the global behaviour of the system, and normal form theory - which deals with subtle local properties of the solutions.
This work was described in Nature (by Ian Stewart), and won several prizes, e.g. the European Mathematical Society Prize, and the R. E. Moore Prize for Applications of Interval Analysis.
Zeit: Mittwoch, 15. Februar 2006, 15.45 Uhr (Kaffeejause), anschlieszend 16.15 Uhr Vortrag
Ort: Fakultaet fuer Mathematik der Universitaet Wien, Nordbergstr. 15, Seminarraum C 2.09
Harald Rindler Arnold Neumaier