Forthcoming events in this series


Wed, 22 Nov 2017

16:00 - 17:00
C4

Warped cones as coarse invariants for actions.

Federico Vigolo
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Warped cones are infinite metric spaces that are associated with actions by homeomorphisms on metric spaces. In this talk I will try to explain why the coarse geometry of warped cones can be seen as an invariant of the action and what it can tell us about the acting group.

Wed, 08 Nov 2017

16:00 - 17:00
C5

When are two right angled Artin groups quasi-isometric?

Alexander Margolis
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

I will give a survey of known results about when two RAAGs are quasi-isometric, and will then describe a visual graph of groups decomposition of a RAAG (its JSJ tree of cylinders) that can often be used to determine whether or not two RAAGs are quasi-isometric.

Wed, 25 Oct 2017

16:00 - 17:00
C5

Trees, Lattices and Superrigidity

Elia Fioravanti
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

If $G$ is an irreducible lattice in a semisimple Lie group, every action of $G$ on a tree has a global fixed point. I will give an elementary discussion of Y. Shalom's proof of this result, focussing on the case of $SL_2(\mathbb{R}) \times SL_2(\mathbb{R})$. Emphasis will be placed on the geometric aspects of the proof and on the importance of reduced cohomology, while other representation theoretic/functional analytic tools will be relegated to a couple of black boxes.

Wed, 18 Oct 2017

16:00 - 17:00
C5

Conformal dimension

David Hume
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

I will present a gentle introduction to the theory of conformal dimension, focusing on its applications to the boundaries of hyperbolic groups, and the difficulty of classifying groups whose boundaries have conformal dimension 1.

Wed, 26 Apr 2017
16:00
C1

The Morse boundary

David Hume
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

We give a construction of a boundary (the Morse boundary) which can be assigned to any proper geodesic metric space and which is rigid, in the sense that a quasi-isometry of spaces induces a homeomorphism of boundaries. To obtain a more workable invariant than the homeomorphism type, I will introduce the metric Morse boundary and discuss notions of capacity and conformal dimensions of the metric Morse boundary. I will then demonstrate that these dimensions give useful invariants of relatively hyperbolic and mapping class groups. This is joint work with Matthew Cordes (Technion).

Wed, 01 Mar 2017
16:00
C1

Treelike structures in boundaries of hyperbolic groups

Benjamin Barrett
(University of Cambridge)
Abstract

Inspired by the theory of JSJ decomposition for 3-manifolds, one can define the JSJ decomposition of a group as a maximal canonical way of cutting it up into simpler pieces using amalgamated products and HNN extensions. If the group in question has some sort of non-positive curvature property then one can define a boundary at infinity for the group, which captures its large scale geometry. The JSJ decomposition of the group is then reflected in the treelike structure of the boundary. In this talk I will discuss this connection in the case of hyperbolic groups and explain some of the ideas used in its proof by Brian Bowditch.

Wed, 15 Feb 2017
16:00
C1

Asymptotic Dimension and Coarse Cohomology

Alex Margolis
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

Asymptotic dimension is a large-scale analogue of Lebesgue covering dimension. I will give a gentle introduction to asymptotic dimension, prove some basic propeties and give some applications to group theory. I will then define coarse homology and explain how when defined, virtual cohomological dimension gives a lower bound on asymptotic dimension.

Thu, 01 Dec 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C2

Cohomology vs. Bounded Cohomology vs. Continuous Bounded Cohomology

Nicolaus Heuer
(University of Oxford)
Abstract

I will compare features of (classical) cohomology theory of groups to the rather exotic features of bounded (or continuous bounded) cohomology of groups.
Besides giving concrete examples I will state classical cohomological tools/features and see how (if) they survive in the case of bounded cohomology. Such will include the Mayer-Vietoris sequence, the transfer map, resolutions, classifying spaces, the universal coefficient theorem, the cup product, vanishing results, cohomological dimension and relation to extensions. 
Finally I will discuss their connection to each other via the comparison map.

Fri, 25 Nov 2016

15:00 - 16:00
S0.29

Hyperbolic Dehn filling in dimension four

Stefano Riolo
(University of Pisa)
Abstract

By gluing copies of a deforming polytope, we describe some deformations of complete, finite-volume hyperbolic cone four-manifolds. Despite the fact that hyperbolic lattices are locally rigid in dimension greater than three (Garland-Raghunathan), we see a four-dimensional analogue of Thurston's hyperbolic Dehn filling: a path of cone-manifolds $M_t$ interpolating between two cusped hyperbolic four-manifolds $M_0$ and $M_1$.

This is a joint work with Bruno Martelli.

Wed, 23 Nov 2016

16:00 - 17:00

Quasi-convexity and Howson's Theorem

Giles Gardam
(Oxford University)
Abstract

This talk will introduce the notion of quasi-convex subgroups. As an application, we will prove that the intersection of two finitely generated subgroups of a free group is again finitely generated.
 

Wed, 02 Nov 2016

16:00 - 17:00

Quasi-isometry Invariance of Group Splittings over Coarse Poincaré Duality Groups

Alex Margolis
(Oxford University)
Abstract

Stallings' theorem states that a finitely generated group splits over a finite subgroup if and only if it has more than one end. As a consequence of this, group splittings over finite subgroups are invariant under quasi-isometry. I will discuss a generalisation of Stallings' theorem which shows that under suitable hypotheses, group splittings over classes of infinite groups, namely coarse $PD_n$ groups, are also invariant under quasi-isometry.

Wed, 26 Oct 2016

16:00 - 17:00

Kähler groups and subdirect products of surface groups

Claudio Llosa Isenrich
(Oxford University)
Abstract

A Kähler group is a group which can be realised as fundamental group of a compact Kähler manifold. I shall begin by explaining why such groups are not arbitrary and then address Delzant-Gromov's question of which subgroups of direct products of surface groups are Kähler. Work of Bridson, Howie, Miller and Short reduces this to the case of subgroups which are not of type $\mathcal{F}_r$ for some $r$. We will give a new construction producing Kähler groups with exotic finiteness properties by mapping products of closed Riemann surfaces onto an elliptic curve. We will then explain how this construction can be generalised to higher dimensions. This talk is independent of last weeks talk on Kähler groups and all relevant notions will be explained.

Wed, 19 Oct 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Kähler groups, residually free groups and subgroups of direct products of surface groups.

Claudio Llosa Isenrich
(Oxford University)
Abstract

A Kähler group is a group which can be realised as the fundamental group of a close Kähler manifold. We will prove that for a Kähler group $G$ we have that $G$ is residually free if and only if $G$ is a full subdirect product of a free abelian group and finitely many closed hyperbolic surface groups. We will then address Delzant-Gromov's question of which subgroups of direct products of surface groups are Kähler: We explain how to construct subgroups of direct products of surface groups which have even first Betti number but are not Kähler. All relevant notions will be explained in the talk.

Wed, 08 Jun 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Finiteness properties of subgroups of direct products of surface groups

Claudio Llosa Isenrich
(Oxford)
Abstract

We will explain a result of Bridson, Howie, Miller and Short on the finiteness properties of subgroups of direct products of surface groups. More precisely, we will show that a subgroup of a direct product of n surface groups is of finiteness type $FP_n$ if and only if there is virtually a direct product of at most n finitely generated surface groups. All relevant notions will be explained in the talk.

 

Wed, 01 Jun 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Finding CAT(-1) structures on groups

Sam Brown
(UCL London)
Abstract

I will describe a method to find negatively curved structures on some groups, by manipulating metrics on piecewise hyperbolic complexes. As an example, I will prove that hyperbolic limit groups are CAT(-1).

Wed, 25 May 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Simplicial Boundary of CAT(0) Cube Complexes

Kobert Ropholler
(Oxford)
Abstract

The simplicial boundary is another way to study the boundary of CAT(0) cube complexes. I will define this boundary introducing the relevant terminology from CAT(0) cube complexes along the way. There will be many examples and many pictures, hopefully to help understanding but also to improve my (not so great) drawing skills. 

Wed, 18 May 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Residual properties of amalgams

Gareth Wilkes
Abstract

I will discuss the circumstances in which residual finiteness properties of an amalgamated free product $A\ast_c B$ may be deduced from the properties of $A$ and $B$, with particular regard to the pro-p residual properties.

Wed, 11 May 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Commutator Subgroup and Quasimorphisms

Nicolaus Heuer
(Oxford)
Abstract

Quasimorphisms (QM) of groups to the reals are well studied and are linked to stable commutator length (scl) via Bavard Duality- Theorem. The notion of QM can be generalized to yield maps  between groups such that each QM from one group pulls back to a QM in the other.

We will give both a short overview of features of scl and investigate these generalized QMs with large scale properties of the commutator group. 

Wed, 04 May 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Classifying Groups up to Quasi-Isometry

Alex Margolis
Abstract

In his ICM address in 1983, Gromov proposed a program of classifying finitely generated groups up to quasi-isometry. One way of approaching this is by breaking a group down into simpler parts by means of a JSJ decomposition. I will give a survey of various JSJ theories and related quasi-isometric rigidity results, including recent work by Cashen and Martin.

Wed, 27 Apr 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C1

Random walks, harmonic functions and Poisson boundary

Vigolo Federico
(Oxford)
Abstract

in this talk I will try to introduce some key ideas and concepts about random walks on discrete spaces, with special interest on random walks on Cayley graphs.

Wed, 09 Mar 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C3

Manifolds with odd Euler characteristic

Renee Hoekzema
(Oxford)
Abstract

Orientable manifolds can only have an odd Euler characteristic in dimensions divisible by 4. I will prove the analogous result for spin and string manifolds, where the dimension can only be a multiple of 8 and 16 respectively. The talk will require very little background. I'll go over the definition of spin and string structures, discuss cohomology operations and Poincare duality.

Wed, 02 Mar 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C3

Group Cohomology and Quasi-Isometries

Alex Margolis
(Oxford)
Abstract

I will present a basic overview of finiteness conditions, group cohomology, and related quasi-isometry invariance results. In particular, I will show that if a group satisfies certain finiteness conditions, group cohomology with group ring coefficients encodes some structure of the `homology at infinity' of a group. This is seen for hyperbolic groups in the work of Bestvina-Mess, which relates the group cohomology to the Čech cohomology of the boundary.

Wed, 24 Feb 2016

16:00 - 17:00
C3

CAT(0) Boundaries

Robert Kropholler
(Oxford University)
Abstract

I will talk about the boundaries of CAT(0) groups giving definitions, some examples and will state some theorems. I may even prove something if there is time.