Blyth Lecture Series

Event Information 24th Annual Blyth Lecture Series
16:00 on Monday March 25, 2019
17:00 on Monday March 25, 2019
BA1210, Bahen Center, 40 St. George St.
Camillo De Lellis

Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS)

Rigidity and flexibility in differential geometry and fluid dynamics

In the fifties John Nash astonished the geometers with his celebrated isometric embedding theorems. A folkloristic explanation of his first theorem is that you should be able to put any piece of paper in your pocket without crumpling or folding it, no matter how large it is. In more precise mathematical terms, while it was long known that sufficiently smooth isometric embeddings must abide some restrictions (the most notable being Gauss' Theorema Egregium), Nash showed that $C^1$ isometric embeddings are surprisingly flexible. A natural question is then whether there is a threshold regularity which discriminates between the two behaviors.

Ten years ago László Székelyhidi and I discovered unexpected similarities with a classical problem in the theory of turbulence. Our remark sparked a series of discoveries and works which have gone in several directions. Among them the most notable is the recent proof of Phil Isett of a long-standing conjecture of Lars Onsager in the theory of turbulent flows: in a nutshell Onsager identified, in 1949, the threshold regularity which discriminates solutions of the Euler equations which preserve the kinetic energy from those that do not.

In these three lectures I will review the classical theorem of Nash, I will illustrate the ideas behind the proof of the Onsager's conjecture and I will finally address a recent joint work with Dominink Inauen, where we identify a critical regularity for the isometric embedding problem.

The first lecture will aim to be accessible to a general scientific audience.

Reception at 3PM in the 6th floor lounge.