Forthcoming events in this series


Tue, 11 May 2010

16:00 - 17:00
SR1

The Asymptotic Cone of a Symmetric Space is a Euclidean Building

Andrew Sale
(Oxford)
Abstract

I will introduce Symmetric spaces via a result of Kleiner & Leeb, comparing the axioms in their definition of a Euclidean building with properties of symmetric spaces of noncompact type.

Mon, 26 Apr 2010 13:00 -
Tue, 27 Apr 2010 14:00
SR1

Delzant and Potyagailo's hierarchical accessibility

Nicholas Touikan
(UQÀM)
Abstract

Take a group G and split it as the fundamental group of a graph of groups, then take the vertex groups and split them as fundamental groups of graphs of groups etc. If at some point you end up with a collection of unsplittable groups, then you have a hierarchy. Haken showed that for any 3-manifold M with an incompressible surface S, one can cut M along S and and then find other incompressible surfaces in M\S and cut again, and repeating this process one eventually obtains a collection of balls. Analogously, Delzant and Potyagailo showed that for any finitely presented group without 2-torsion and a certain sensible class E of subgroups of G, G admits a hierarchy where the edge groups of the splittings lie in E. I really like their proof and I will present it.

Tue, 02 Mar 2010
16:00
SR1

Limit Groups

Benno Kuckuck
(Oxford)
Tue, 09 Feb 2010
16:00
SR1

The Alexander Polynomial

Jessica Banks
(Oxford)
Abstract

The Alexander polynomial of a link was the first link polynomial. We give some ways of defining this much-studied invariant, and derive some of its properties.

Wed, 03 Feb 2010

16:00 - 17:00
SR2

TBC

Alessandro Sisto
(Oxford University)
Tue, 02 Feb 2010
16:00
SR1

Outer Space

Richard Wade
(Oxford)
Abstract

We introduce Outer space, a contractible finite dimensional topological space on which the outer automorphism group of a free group acts 'nicely.' We will explain what 'nicely' is, and provide motivation with comparisons to symmetric spaces, analogous spaces associated to linear groups.

Tue, 19 Jan 2010
16:00
SR1

CAT(0) spaces and their boundaries

Dawid Kielak
(Oxford)
Abstract

We will look at CAT(0) spaces, their isometries and boundaries (defined through Busemann functions).

Tue, 17 Nov 2009
16:00
DH 1st floor SR

Automata Groups

Owen Cotton-Barratt