Dr Thomas Bothner
BSc, MSc, PhD
Current positions
Lecturer
School of Mathematics
Contact
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Research interests
My research program is concerned with analytic and probabilistic questions in mathematical physics and I place particular emphasis on topics in random matrix theory which display intimate connections to mathematical statistical mechanics and the field of integrable differential equations. The application of asymptotics methods, special functions, probability theory, orthogonal polynomials and potential theory is central to this work. Current areas of interest include (see below for PhD projects in those areas):
1) Random matrix theory and the theory of random processes: In a nutshell, my work in this field is concerned with the
- analysis of gap, distribution and correlation functions in invariant random matrix models and thinned versions thereof
- description of extreme values in non-Hermitian random matrix models
- identification of universality classes in Hermitian one- or multi-matrix models
- spectral analysis of integrable integral operators
- development of Hamiltonian approaches to the analysis of gap asymptotics
2) Exactly solvable lattice models in statistical mechanics: I have derived results for
- the six-vertex model with domain wall boundary conditions: computation of the free energy and subleading terms for the partition function and analysis of phase transitions
- the 2D Ising model: elementary derivation of the scaling function constant in the short distance expansion of the tau-function associated with 2-point functions
3) Integrable differential equations: Most of my work in this field is concerned with Painleve special functions, focusing on the
- unified asymptotic description of certain real-valued Painleve transcendents
- introduction of Schur/orthogonal polynomial methods to the analysis of rational Painleve functions
- development of nonlinear steepest descent techniques for singular Painleve transcendents
- total Painleve integral evaluations
Recent preprints as well as published work can be found on arXiv and MathSciNet as well as ORCID. Feel free to contact me if you are interested in one of the PhD projects below, I am happy to discuss specifics, prerequisites and learning outcomes.
Current and future work My current efforts lie at the forefront of research in mathematical statistical mechanics of highly correlated systems with focus on three major themes: exactly solvable lattice models, quantum gases and random matrices. The long-term goal is to unveil ground-breaking original connections between those themes and resolve a series of long-standing conjectures about the system’s underlying analytic and asymptotic behaviors. Here are two concrete PhD projects in this area
A) Statistical properties of quantum gases at positive temperature
B) Topological expansions for (near) random matrix models
Positions
University of Bristol positions
Lecturer
School of Mathematics
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Limit shapes for square ice and tails of the KPZ equation
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of MathematicsDates
27/10/2020 to 26/09/2023
Publications
Recent publications
04/09/2020On the origins of Riemann-Hilbert problems in mathematics
Nonlinearity
The largest real eigenvalue in the real Ginibre ensemble and its relation to the Zakharov–Shabat system
Annals of Applied Probability
Rational Solutions of the Painlevé-III Equation
On the analysis of incomplete spectra in random matrix theory through an extension of the Jimbo–Miwa–Ueno differential
Advances in Mathematics
A Short Note on the Scaling Function Constant Problem in the Two-Dimensional Ising Model
Journal of Statistical Physics