From sekr.mathematik at univie.ac.at Thu Sep 27 15:02:11 2007 From: sekr.mathematik at univie.ac.at (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Institut_f=FCr_Mathematik?=) Date: Thu Sep 27 15:01:16 2007 Subject: auszerord.Math.Koll. Di.2.10.07, 15:00 Uhr/Prof. Mayo Message-ID: <000001c80106$9eed1bf0$93108283@math> Auszerordentliches Mathematisches Kolloquium im Rahmen der AG Biomathematik EINLADUNG zu einem VORTRAG von Prof. Oliver Mayo (CSIRO, Adelaide, Australien) mit dem Thema: ''The rise and fall of the common disease common variant hypothesis: How the sickle cell disease paradigm led us all astray (or did it?)'' Zeit: Dienstag, 2. Oktober 2007, 15.00 Uhr Vortrag Ort: Fakultaet fuer Mathematik der Universitaet Wien, Nordbergstr. 15, Seminarraum D 1.03 UZA IV Buerger Reinhard Hofbauer Josef Sigmund Karl From sekr.mathematik at univie.ac.at Thu Sep 27 15:14:21 2007 From: sekr.mathematik at univie.ac.at (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Institut_f=FCr_Mathematik?=) Date: Thu Sep 27 15:13:28 2007 Subject: Math.Kolls am 3.10.07 15:00 u. 16:15/Prof. Orlov u. Prof. Eisenberg Message-ID: <000101c80108$51e6b760$93108283@math> Mathematisches Kolloquium EINLADUNG zu einem VORTRAG von Prof. Dmitry Orlov (Steklov Math. Institute RAS, Algebra Section) mit dem Thema: ''Derived categories of coherent sheaves and triangulated categories of singularities'' Abstract: Homological mirror symmetry is a relation between algebraic and symplectic sides of geometric objects. Originally mirror symmetry came from physics, but the homological mirror symmetry conjecture, formulated by M. Kontsevich for Calabi-Yau varieties, is an attempt to give a mathematical explanation of this phenomenon. We will try to describe the main principles of homological mirror symmetry and its extention to the non-Calabi-Yau case. We will explain how Landau-Ginzburg models appear in mirror symmetry, and will give some examples of mirror symmetry where noncommutative deforamations of varieties are directly related to variation of the symplectic form in LG-models. Zeit: Mittwoch, 3. Oktober 2007, 15.00 Uhr Vortrag, anschlieszend 16.15 Uhr (Kaffeejause) Ort: Fakultaet fuer Mathematik der Universitaet Wien, Nordbergstr. 15, Seminarraum C 2.09 Harald Rindler Ludmil Katzarkov ____________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ _____ Mathematisches Kolloquium EINLADUNG zu einem VORTRAG von Prof. Bob Eisenberg (Rush University, Dept of Molecular Biophysics & Physiology) mit dem Thema: ''Ions in Solutions and Channels: Physical and Biological Plasmas'' Abstract: Ion channels are proteins with a hole down their middle that conduct ions (spherical charges like Na + , K+ , Ca 2+ , and Cl - with diameter ~ 0.2 nm) through a narrow tunnel of fixed charge ('doping') with diameter ~ 0.6 nm. Ionic channels control the movement of electric charge and current across biological membranes and so play a role in biology as significant as the role of transistors in computers: a substantial fraction of all drugs used by physicians act on channels. Channels can be studied in the tradition of physical science. Poisson-Drift diffusion equations familiar in plasma and semiconductor physics - called Poisson Nernst Planck or PNP in biology - form an adequate model of current voltage relations in many types of channels under many conditions if extended to include correlations, and can be extended to describe 'chemical' phenomena like selectivity with some success. Ionic channels are manipulated with the powerful techniques of molecular biology in hundreds of laboratories. Atoms (and thus charges) can be substituted a few at a time and the location of every atom can be determined in favorable cases. Ionic channels are one of the few living systems of great importance whose natural biological function can be well described by a tractable set of equations. An opportunity exists to apply the well established methods of computational physics to a central problem of computational biology. The plasmas of biology can be analyzed like the plasmas of physics. Zeit: Mittwoch, 3. Oktober 2007, 16.15 Uhr Kaffeejause, anschlieszend 16.30 Uhr Vortrag Ort: Fakultaet fuer Mathematik der Universitaet Wien, Nordbergstr. 15, Seminarraum C 2.09 Harald Rindler Clemens Heitzinger