ICTP is pleased to announce that the forthcoming ICTP
Colloquium on "Optics, Vision, and Evolution, after Mitchell
Feigenbaum 1944-2019" by Jean-Pierre Eckmann will take
place TODAY, Tuesday 17 September 2019, at 16:30 hrs, in the
Budinich Lecture Hall, Leonardo Building, ICTP.
Biosketch: Jean-Pierre Eckmann is professor of
Physics and Mathematics at the University of Geneva,
Switzerland, where he has spent his whole academic life. He
works on many aspects of mathematical physics, such as
ergodic theory of dynamicla systems, and head conduction.
Abstract: Some
people in the audience may be aware of Feigenbaum's
astonishing discovery of the universality of period
doubling, and the constant delta=4.66920 which carries his
name. However, Mitchell Feigenbaum worked, in the last 13
years of his life, on other subjects, and wrote the
manuscript (in TeX) of a book the title of which is:
"Reflections on a Tube". This is closely related to his
life-long interest in optics and aspects of vision. It
deals with the optics of images reflected in a cylindrical
mirror (usually called anamorphic pictures). He shows that
the eye does not interpret ray-tracing, but caustics. But
there are two caustics, and therefore, the viewer can
actually see two different images in two different places.
The visual system will often prefer one over the other.
The question is the "which" and "why"? Starting from this
discovery, Feigenbaum derived other aspects of this
observation, dealing with the vision of fish, the "broken"
pencil in water, or aspects of the floor of swimming
pools. All these examples show two possible images. His
study shows how a question in classical optics can lead to
the interesting question in perception and the visual
system.
More information is available at http://indico.ictp.it/event/9048/
Light refreshments will be served after the talk.
You are all very warmly invited to attend.
With best regards,
Office of the Director, ICTP