Prof. Eytan Katzav,King's College London

Date: 
Mon, 04/11/201312:00-13:30
Location: 
Levin building, Lecture Hall No. 8
"Packing Problems - A Statistical Physics Approach":
Packing problems play an important role in many areas of physics and mathematics. One can classify packing problems according to the dimensionality of the container and the dimensionality of the packed objects, as well as the kind of interactions between the objects. Probably the most famous example, which is still extensively studied, is hard spheres, modeling phases of matter, such as crystals, fluids and glasses. In higher dimensions optimal, packings are related to questions in information theory. We will show how statistical physics can be helpful to understand a variety of packing problems by offering a powerful toolbox of techniques and modeling approaches, ranging from phenomenological thermodynamic modeling to more formal field theoretic methods. Certain similarities between the different problems and techniques will be highlighted, that may guide future directions in this field.