Abstract: The mini-course is an introductory and self-contained approach to the method of intrinsic scaling, aiming at bringing to light what is really essential in this powerful tool in the analysis of degenerate and singular equations. The theory is presented from scratch for the simplest model case of the degenerate p-Laplace equation, leaving aside
technical renements needed to deal with more general situations. A striking feature of the method is its pervasiveness in terms of the applications and I hope to convince the audience of its strength as a systematic approach to regularity for an important and relevant class of nonlinear partial dierential equations. I will extensively follow my book
14 , with complements and extensions from a variety of sources (listed in the references), mainly
6,7,17

10/16()09:00 11:00 Lecture I.
An impressionist history lesson: from Hilbert's 19th problem to DeGiorgi-Nash-Moser theory; the quasilinear case { contributions from the Russian school; enters DiBenedetto { the method of intrinsic scaling.

10/17()09:00- 11:00 Lecture II.
The building blocks of the theory: local energy and logarithmic estimates. The geometric setting and an alternative.

10/19()09:00 -11:00 Lecture III.
The rst alternative: getting started; expansion in time and the role of the logarithmic estimates; reduction of the oscillation.

10/22()09:00 -11:00 Lecture IV.
Towards the Holder continuity: the second alternative; the recursive argument.

10/23()09:00 -11:00 Lecture V.
The singular case and further generalisations: immiscible uids and chemotaxis; phase transitions.
Subject
Jul 27, 2016  16:00-18:00  Group actions on low dimensions II Thomas Koberda  129-406 
Aug 02, 2016  16:00-18:00  Toward a structure theorem for double Burnside algebras Sejong Park  129-301 
Oct 04, 2016  16:00-18:00  Small data scattering for fractional Hartree equations 조용근  27-116 
Feb 23, 2016  16:00-18:00  Using Random Matrices in Quantum Information Theory Ion Nechita  129-301 
Feb 24, 2016  16:00-18:00  Using Random Matrices in Quantum Information Theory Ion Nechita  129-301 
Feb 22, 2016  16:00-18:00  Using Random Matrices in Quantum Information Theory Ion Nechita  129-301 
Mar 16, 2016  16:00-18:00  Machine Learning for Music 하길찬  129-301 
Jan 05, 2017  16:00-18:00  Regularity theory for parabolic equations Lihe Wang  27-325 
Apr 29, 2016  16:00-18:00  Strichartz estimates for kinetic and Schrödinger equations Neal Bez  129-406 
May 24, 2016  16:00-18:00  Decay estimates for Fourier transform of measures on fractal sets 함세헌  27-116 
May 31, 2016  16:00-18:00  Unique continuation for the Schrodinger equation with gradient terms 서이혁  27-116 
Apr 18, 2017  16:00-18:00  Adapted spaces and their applications to fractional Schrödinger equations 조용근  27-116 
Apr 20, 2017  16:00-18:00  편미분방정식 초청강연 Lihe Wang  129-301 
Jul 20, 2016  16:00-18:00  Metastable behavior of the dynamics perturbed by a small random noise Insuk Seo  129-301 
Apr 28, 2017  16:00-18:00  Specht modules for quiver Hecke algebras of type C file 박의용  27-220 
May 30, 2017  16:00-18:00  Discrete Hilbert transforms along parabolas file 김준일  27-116 
Oct 11, 2016  16:00-18:00  Quasi-neutral limit for the Euler-Poisson system 권봉석  27-116 
Oct 21, 2016  16:00-18:00  Volumes of knots, links and polyhedra in the hyperbolic, spherical and Euclidean spaces Alexander Mednykh  27-325 
Nov 01, 2016  16:00-18:00  An extremizer for the kinetic energy inequality 홍영훈  27-116 
Nov 08, 2016  16:00-18:00  Global well-posedness of abelian gauge theories for small critical Sobolev data 오성진  27-116