The Øresund Seminar on Analysis, PDEs & Related Topics Summer 2026 (at KU)
Speakers:
- Mikael Persson Sundqvist (U Lund)
- Olof Rubin (KTH),
- Artemis Vogiatzi (KU)
-
Aleksei Kulikov (KU)
The lectures on June 1st, 2026 are held at the August Krogh Building, Aud 02 AKB, Universitetsparken 13, near MATH at U Copenhagen. Entering the complex is easiest coming from the park side, i.e. use the door at the GPS coordinates 55.701311, 12.558657:
https://maps.google.com/?q=55.701311,12.558657
Then keep going in and walk up the stairs to the upper level, where the auditorium Aud 02 AKB will be on your left side.
(For the MATH department itself, where we will not be this time: Entering the H.C. Ørsted Building is easiest from the park side e.g. the door at GPS coordinates 55.700609, 12.560782: https://maps.google.com/?q=55.700609,12.560782)
Before the event, many of us plan to walk for lunch, at 12.00, at the new Niels Bohr Building canteen, just a short walk from the department - the entrance to canteen is at these GPS coordinates: 55.7010424,12.5573901.
https://maps.google.com/?q=55.7010424,12.5573901
Please see, for more program details:
https://sites.google.com/view/oeresunds-seminar
13.15-14.00: Mikael Persson Sundqvist (Lund U)
Title: Diskqualified? Magnetic Schrödinger operators in the unit disk
Abstract: Magnetic Schrödinger operators in the unit disk provide a useful testing ground for spectral questions. The symmetry of the disk allows for a much more detailed analysis than is possible for typical domains, but it also creates special difficulties and phenomena that do not appear in generic situations.
The talk will take as its starting point an image from a 1965 work of Saint-James, an image that suggests several natural questions about the spectrum. I will describe some known spectral properties of these operators, explain what numerical computations seem to suggest, and discuss several questions that remain open.
14.15-15.00: Artemis Vogiatzi (KU)
Title: High Codimension Curve Shortening Flow with Free Boundary
Abstract: This talk is going to be about curve shortening flow in high codimension for arcs with free boundary meeting a fixed smooth barrier orthogonally. We prove dilation-invariant curvature and higher-derivative estimates up to the boundary using a Stahl-type localised maximum principle and an adapted cut-off. Using a reflected Gaussian entropy and blow-up analysis, Type I boundary singularities yield a shrinking semicircle model after reflection. Type II blow-ups give a Grim Reaper translator, which is ruled out under a free-boundary entropy bound $<2$. Hence in the low-entropy regime the flow either converges to the orthogonal chord or has only semicircle boundary singularities. This is a joint work with Huy T. Nguyen.
15.00-15.30 Coffee break ☕
Location: In front of where the lectures are (Aud 02 AKB, August Krogh Building)
15.30-16.15: Olof Rubin (KTH)
Title: Chebyshev polynomials for Jordan arcs
Abstract: Given a compact set K ⊆ C containing infinitely many points, there is a unique monic polynomial of degree n that minimizes the uniform norm on K. This polynomial is called the Chebyshev polynomial of degree n for K. A classical problem is to understand how the geometric properties of K are reflected in the asymptotic behavior of the associated Chebyshev polynomials as n grows.
This picture is more or less complete when K consists of smooth Jordan curves that are mutually disjoint. Faber considered the case of a single analytic Jordan curve in 1920, and Widom considered several curves in 1969.
Chebyshev polynomials for Jordan arcs have proven more elusive. Widom conjectured in 1969 that the interval should provide the model behavior in this setting. However, this conjecture was shown to be false by a counterexample involving arcs on the unit circle. Instead, the two sides of the arc turn out to play a crucial role. In this talk, I will explain recent progress toward a revised conjecture by Christiansen, Simon, and Zinchenko.
This is based on joint work with Benedikt Buchecker, Benjamin Eichinger and Aron Wennman.
16.30-17.15: Aleksei Kulikov (KU)
Title: Frames for compactly supported functions with irrational density
Abstract: For a nice function g we consider the set of its time-frequency shifts g_{n,m}(x) = g(x-an) exp(2πi bmx) over integers n, m and ask if it forms a frame for L^2(R), that is if for all functions f in L^2(R) the sum of |<f, g_{n,m}>|^2 is proportional to ||f||^2.
Density theorem says that if ab > 1 then this is never so. If the function g is supported on [c, d] then we also have a necessary condition a < d-c as otherwise the supports of the functions g_{n,m} do not even cover the whole R. In this talk we will show that if the function g is generic then these two conditions are also sufficient as long as the density ab is irrational.
The talk is based on a joint work with Yurii Belov.
18.30 Dinner at Food Club Nørrebro, Sortedam Dossering 7C, 2200 København N (if you had registered at the below link, by Wednesday May 27th at 12 (noon))
Please register at https://www.math.ku.dk/english/calendar/events/oeresund-seminar-summer-2026/registration.
If attending just for talks/coffee/cake - register no later than Thursday May 28th, 2026, at 12 (noon).
Dinner is at Food Club Nørrebro, at 18:30 (if you had registered by Wednesday May 27th, 2026, at 12 (noon)):
https://maps.app.goo.gl/H1Cz3CF9wFWHkTSh8
Søren Fournais
Niels Martin Møller [nmoller@math.ku.dk]
Jan Philip Solovej
Magnus Goffeng
Jacob Stordal Christiansen
Erik Wahlén
