Outreach Activities
Mathematics is a living subject – as our outreach activities show: In the school portal, you will find many offers for students and teachers. The ix-quadrat hands-on mathematics exhibition is aimed at young and old and shows that mathematics can be "grasped". The news from the Department of Mathematics will show you where mathematics is alive.
School Portal
Students, teachers, parents and interested individuals can find information and opportunities to get to know mathematics as an interesting subject and field of study here.
Math Exhibition ix-quadrat
The ix-quadrat is a hands-on exhibition which aims to awaken interest in mathematics in general and makes mathematics literally tangible.
News from the Department of Mathematics
Department Colloquium February 2024
Department, Colloquium |
Lecture date: Wednesday, 7 February 2024
- 14:30 - 15:30: Christoph Knochenhauer, TUM (Inaugural Lecture)
- 15:30 - 16:00: Coffee break
- 16:00 - 17:00: Lorenz Panny, TUM (Inaugural Lecture)
Organisator:innen:
Why your Asset Manager cares about PDE Regularity
Christoph Knochenhauer, TUM: 14:30 - 15:30
Partial differential equations are the backbone of many results in applied Mathematical Finance. For example, prices of derivative contracts can be characterized in terms of linear, parabolic, second-order PDEs, and solutions of optimal investment problems are intimately linked to fully nonlinear, parabolic or elliptic second-order equations of Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman type. In this talk, we discuss to which extend this relationship can also be reversed in that existence, uniqueness, and regulartiy results on certain PDEs can be given a financial interpretation. In particular, we consider several examples including optimal investment problems for institutional or private investors and optimal execution problems for large agents such as hedge funds. We conclude with an outlook on work in progress on a new notion of differentiability designed to construct regular solutions of degenerate second-order PDEs.
Cryptography and Quantum Computers
Lorenz Panny, TUM: 16:00 - 17:00
The rise of quantum computing threatens the security of currently deployed cryptographic systems that are used, for instance, to secure the internet, as well as pretty much anything else that has a computer chip in it. In this presentation I intend to give a broad overview over the impact of these developments on our cryptographic world and discuss possible solutions to the impending catastrophe, with a particular focus on the mathematical aspects of post-quantum cryptography.