Eventually Almost Everywhere
The first round of the British Mathematical Olympiad was marked in early December. Belatedly, here are some thoughts of the problems. These aren’t supposed to be official solutions, and some of them are not in fact solutions at all. Students … Continue reading →
I’m currently lecturing the course Fundamentals of Probability at KCL, where we cover some of the measure theory required to set up probability with a higher level of formality than students have seen in their introductory courses. By this point, … Continue reading →
I’m currently lecturing my first course at King’s, which builds measure theory from the ground up to the construction of the Lebesgue integral, along with some more probabilistic topics. In this second week, we have been discussing various matters related … Continue reading →
This year, I was lecturing the first year probability course in Cambridge. To supplement the usual excellent problem sets I inherited from James Norris and many previous lecturers, I prepared extension problems for enthusiastic students. A handful of the extension … Continue reading →
The second and final round of this year’s British Mathematical Olympiad took place on Thursday. Here are some thoughts on the problems. I wasn’t involved in choosing the problems, although I did write Q4. I’ll say a bit more about … Continue reading →
The first round of the British Mathematical Olympiad was sat on Thursday by roughly 2000 pupils in the UK, and a significant number overseas on Friday. For obvious reasons, much of the past 18 months has been dominated by logistical … Continue reading →
For a Galton-Watson tree, can one obtain upper bounds in probability on the height of the tree, uniformly across all offspring distributions with mean $latex \mu$? Continue reading →
[Ho63] addresses the alternative model where the increments of a random walk are chosen uniformly without replacement from a particular set. The potted summary is that the sum of random increments chosen without replacement has the same mean, but is more concentrated that the corresponding sum of random increments chosen with replacement. This means that any of the concentration results proved in…
The first round of the British Mathematical Olympiad was sat yesterday. The paper can be found here, and video solutions here. Copyright for the questions is held by BMOS. They are reproduced here with permission. I hope any students who … Continue reading →
Last week, we held our annual IMO training and selection camp in the lovely surroundings of Trinity College, Cambridge. Four of our students have subsequently spent this week in Kiev, for the ninth edition of the prestigious European Girls’ Mathematical … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. Preliminary – positive correlation, Harris inequality I wrote about independence, association, and the … Continue reading →
The second round of the British Mathematical Olympiad was taken on Thursday by the 100 or so top scoring eligible participants from the first round, as well as some open entries. Qualifying for BMO2 is worth celebrating in its own … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. As we enter the final stages of the semester, I want to discuss … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. As we enter the final stages of the semester, I want to discuss … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. As we edge into the second half of the course, we are now … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. By this point of the course, we’ve studied several aspects of the Erdos-Renyi … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. This lecture consisted of revision of the most relevant theory of Galton-Watson trees, … Continue reading →
The first round of the British Mathematical Olympiad was sat yesterday. The paper can be found here, and video solutions here. Copyright for the questions is held by BMOS. They are reproduced here with permission. I hope any students who … Continue reading →
I am aiming to write a short post about each lecture in my ongoing course on Random Graphs. Details and logistics for the course can be found here. In this third lecture, we made our first foray into the scaling regime … Continue reading →
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