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Rocky Mountain Algebraic Combinatorics

August 25, 2023 @ 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm

To join us for dinner after the talks, please RSVP here by Thursday, August 24 for reservation count.

Getting to the roots: From X-ray crystallography to factoring polynomials
Bernhard Bodmann
University of Houston

This talk concerns a problem in non-linear signal reconstruction which has a
long history, unsolved problems and many modern applications: signal
recovery from intensity measurements. A notorious example is X-ray
crystallography, the determination of a function from the magnitude of its
Fourier transform. After a brief overview of the history of this inverse
problem, we study a toy model, determining a complex polynomial from its
magnitudes on the unit circle. This simple problem already exhibits the main
difficulties that need to be overcome in X-ray crystallography and points to
methods from harmonic analysis and real algebraic geometry that resolve the
underdetermined nature of intensity measurements. The talk will conclude
with an alternative to a construction by Cynthia Vinzant, addressing the
minimal number of quantities that are needed for recovery in the cubic case,
and an open problem.

Spikes, Graphs and Modulations: Phase Retrieval for Finitely Supported Complex Measures
Bernhard Bodmann
University of Houston

This talk continues the discussion of mathematical models for X-ray
crystallography. Here, we consider the task of recovering a finitely
supported complex measure from observing the magnitude of its Fourier
transform or the magnitude of differences of its Fourier transform at
several locations. Following a strategy by Alexeev and others, the structure
of the locations used for these intensity measurements is encoded in a
graph. More precisely, a vertex in the graph represents a magnitude
measurement of the Fourier transform at a given frequency, and the edge
represents the magnitude of a (modulated) difference between the values of
the Fourier transform at two points. We show that a measurement chosen in
accordance with a Ramanujan graph of degree at least 3 and a sufficiently
large number of vertices is sufficient for identifying the complex measure
up to an overall multiplicative constant.

The material presented in this
talk is joint work with Ahmed Abouserie.

Details

Date:
August 25, 2023
Time:
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Venue

Weber 223

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