Dynamical Systems Seminar

Dynamical Systems Seminar

List of Talks given in 1999-2000

Monday, September 13   Yulij Ilyashenko, Cornell University and Moscow State University
Minimal attractors
Monday, September 20   John Hubbard, Cornell University
How to prove KAM in the simplest case
Monday, September 27   John Hubbard, Cornell University
A proof of KAM in the simplest case, part 2
Friday, October 1   Mike Shub, IBM
Stable ergodicity
Friday, October 15   Kaushal Verma, Syracuse University
Hyperbolic automorphisms and holomorphic motions in two complex variables
Monday, October 25   Tadashi Tokieda, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Université du Quebec a Montréal
Perturbation theory for symmetric hamiltonian systems
Tuesday, October 26   Anton Borisiuk, Moscow State University
Global bifurcations on the Klein bottle
Friday, October 29   Svetlana Katok, Pennsylvania State University
Rigidity of measurable structure for algebraic actions of higher-rank abelian groups
Monday, November 15   Rob Benedetto, University of Rochester
Dynamics of p-adic rational functions
Monday, November 22   John Guckenheimer, Cornell University
Canards in a model of reciprocal inhibition
Monday, November 29   Yutaka Ishii, Cornell University
A two-dimensional kneading theory for Lozi maps and their entropy formulae
Monday, January 31   John Hubbard, Cornell University
Newton's method in two complex variables
Monday, February 7   John Hubbard, Cornell University
Newton's method in two complex variables, part 2
Monday, February 14   Carsten Petersen, Cornell University
On critical holomorphic quasi circle maps
Monday, February 21   Carsten Petersen, Cornell University
On critical holomorphic quasi circle maps
Monday, February 28   Adam Epstein, Cornell University
(Limits of) quadratic rational maps with a (degenerate) parabolic fixed point
Monday, March 6   Saeed Zakeri, University of Pennsylvania
Dynamics of cubic Siegel polynomials
Monday, March 27   Andrey Shilnikov, Cornell University
Blue-sky catastrophe bifurcation
Monday, April 10   Dierk Schleicher, SUNY at Stony Brook
The dynamics of exponential maps and the dimension paradox