General Meeting of the Society & Hardy Lecture 2023

Location
Mary Ward House, London and online via Zoom, hosted by the LMS
Start date
-
Meeting Date
Speakers
新澳开奖Hardy Lecturer 2023: Eva Miranda (UPC, Barcelona) and Sir Roger Penrose FRS (Oxford)

新澳开奖General Meeting & Hardy Lecture 2023

The lectures are aimed at a general mathematical audience. All interested, whether 新澳开奖members or not, are most welcome to attend this event.


Programme (all timings are in BST)

3.30 pm Opening of the meeting and 新澳开奖Business (open to all)

3.45 pm First Lecture: Sir Roger Penrose FRS (Oxford)

Non-computability in Physics?

Abstract: Three lecture courses I attended in Cambridge, in the early 1950s (not part of my official PhD topic in algebraic geometry) had a profound influence on my later research. These were by Steen, on mathematical logic, Bondi, on general relativity, and Dirac on quantum mechanics. Steen showed, in effect, via G枚del鈥檚 theorems and Turing computability, why conscious understanding could not be a purely computational process. But if our brains and bodies are, in essence, just physical systems, albeit very sophisticated ones, how could they be capable of non-computable tasks, as seem to be implied by an ability to appreciate the truth of G枚del鈥檚 statements?

Elsewhere I have made a case that a missing ingredient lies in an incompleteness of quantum theory, namely that the process referred to as 鈥渨ave-function collapse鈥 may objectively underlie this essential missing ingredient, allowing non-computable conscious actions. In this talk, I explore an alternative possibility, arising from a gap occurring in the behaviour of classical systems, pointed out by Dirac in 1938.                                                                                                                                                                                                             

4.45pm Break

5.15 pm 新澳开奖Hardy Lecture 2023: Eva Miranda (UPC, Barcelona)

From Alan Turing to Fluid computers: Explored and unexplored paths.

Abstract:  The notion of Chaos was coined by Edward Lorenz in 1961 with the simple statement

"Chaos: When the present determines the future, but the approximate present does not approximately determine the future".

A different sort of chaos was discovered by Cris Moore in 1990 with a 2D Turing-type dynamical system via generalized shifts. The existence of a Turing machine associated with the dynamical system added a new intrigue to the plot: the undecidability of the halting problem (Alan Turing, 1936) yielded the impossibility of logical predictions in the new models.  However, those 2D  systems given by mappings on the square Cantor set are not realized by a physical system. Can a mechanical system (including a fluid flow) simulate a universal Turing machine?

In this talk, I will present a  3D physical (and/or "almost" physical) constructions of logical chaos using fluids. Against all expectations, the main ingredient of this construction is geometrical. It relies on a mirror, unveiled in 2000 by Etnyre and Ghrist, between Beltrami fields and Reeb vector fields native to contact geometry.

Many questions around such construction are pending, including the connection among different levels of complexity (dynamical and logical) and the (non)existence of a hierarchy among them.  The association of a 鈥渃omputer鈥 to Fluid dynamics is a question which dates back to the work of Roger Penrose and Cris Moore and is connected to a recent  programme of Terence Tao to address the Navier-Stokes conjecture.  In his program. Tao speculates with the possibility of finding a counterexample to the Millennium problem using ideas closely related to Turing machines.

This construction of a "fluid computer" realizes the science fiction dream of Stanis艂aw Lem in his novel Solaris. But could such a fluid computer be used to realize Tao鈥檚 dream?

6.15pm Close of meeting

6.30pm 新澳开奖Reception at Mary Ward House

7.30pm Society Dinner at The Wendy House, Bedford Hotel, Southampton Row


Registration

  • In person registration for this event is now closed. If you would like to be added to the waiting list, please contact lmsmeetings@lms.ac.uk
     
  • To attend remotely, please complete the registration form here. Registration will close no later than 6.15pm on Friday 30 June. You will receive the link to the meeting upon registration, as well in an automated reminder email which will be sent closer to the time. If you have any queries, please contact lmsmeetings@lms.ac.uk
     
  • Reservations for the Society Dinner are sold out. If you would like to join the waiting list, please contact lmsmeetings@lms.ac.uk
     
  • Travel/caring grants of up to 拢50 to support attending the Hardy Lecture are available to mathematicians who are based at neighbouring universities to those universities and would require financial support. If you require support, please complete the  as soon as you can and at least 3 working days before the event. If you have any queries, please contact lmsmeetings@lms.ac.uk