Events

Past Event

Applied Mathematics Colloquium with Anjali Nair, U Chicago

September 25, 2025
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
America/New_York
Mudd Hall, 500 W. 120 St., New York, NY 10027 214

Speaker: Anjali Nair, U Chicago

Title: "From Schrödinger to diffusion- speckle formation of light in random media and the Gaussian conjecture"

Abstract:

A well-known conjecture in physical literature states that high frequency waves propagating through random media over long distances eventually become complex Gaussian distributed. The intensity of such wave fields then follows an exponential law, consistent with speckle formation observed in physical experiments. Though fairly well-accepted and intuitive, this conjecture is not entirely supported by any detailed mathematical derivation. In this talk, I will discuss some recent results demonstrating the Gaussian conjecture in a weak-coupling regime of the paraxial approximation.

The paraxial approximation is a high frequency approximation of the Helmholtz equation, where backscattering is ignored. This takes the form of a Schrödinger equation with a random potential and is often used to model laser propagation through turbulence. In particular, I will describe a diffusive scaling where the limiting probability distribution of the wavefield is completely described by a second moment which follows an anomalous diffusion. The proof relies on the asymptotic closeness of statistical moments of the wavefield under the paraxial approximation, its white noise limit and the complex Gaussian distribution itself. An additional stochastic continuity/tightness criterion allows to show the convergence of these distributions over spaces of Hölder-continuous functions. Theoretical results are supported through numerical simulations.

This is joint work with Guillaume Bal.


Bio:

Anjali Nair is a William H. Kruskal instructor at the University of Chicago. Prior to this, she obtained a Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a bachelor's degree in Engineering Physics from the Indian Institute of Technology Madras. Her research interests include applied analysis and computation for partial differential equations, applied probability, inverse problems and optimization with a focus on wave propagation through complex media and kinetic theory.


In person attendance at this seminar is only open to Columbia University affiliates. External guests are welcome to attend remotely. Please contact [email protected] if you need the Zoom link for this seminar.

Contact Information

APAM Department