Forthcoming events in this series
Mirror symmetry and mixed Hodge structures I
Abstract
I will explain how essential information about the structure of symplectic manifolds is captured by algebraic data, and specifically by the non-commutative mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of the Fukaya category. I will discuss computable Hodge theoretic invariants arising from twist functors, and from geometric extensions. I will also explain how the instanton-corrected Chern-Simons theory fits in the framework of normal functions in non-commutative Hodge theory and will give applications to explicit descriptions of quantum Lagrangian branes. This is a joint work with L. Katzarkov and M. Kontsevich.
Derived Categories of Cubic 4-Folds
Abstract
If $X$ is a Fano variety with canonical bundle $O(-k)$, its derived category
has a semi-orthogonal decomposition (I will say what that means)
\[ D(X) = \langle O(-k+1), ..., O(-1), O, A \rangle, \]
where the subcategory $A$ is the "interesting piece" of $D(X)$. In the previous talk we saw that $A$ can have very rich geometry. In this talk we will see a less well-understood example of this: when $X$ is a smooth cubic in $P^5$, $A$ looks like the derived category of a K3 surface. We will discuss Kuznetsov's conjecture that $X$ is rational if and only if $A$ is geometric, relate it to Hassett's earlier work on the Hodge theory of $X$, and mention an autoequivalence of $D(Hilb^2(K3))$ that I came across while studying the problem.
Complete Intersections of Quadrics
Abstract
There is a long-studied correspondence between intersections of two quadrics and hyperelliptic curves, first noticed by Weil and since used
as a testbed for many fashionable theories: Hodge theory, motives, and moduli of vector bundles in the '70s and '80s, derived categories in the '90s, non-commutative geometry and mirror symmetry today. The story generalizes to three, four, and more quadrics, exhibiting new geometric behaviour at each step. The case of four quadrics nicely illustrates the modern theory of flops and derivced categories and, as a special case, gives a pair of derived-equivalent Calabi-Yau 3-folds.
(HoRSe seminar) Localized virtual cycles, and applications to GW and DT invariants II
Abstract
We first present the localized virtual cycles by cosections of obstruction sheaves constructed by Kiem and Li. This construction has two kinds of applications: one is define invariants for non-proper moduli spaces; the other is to reduce the obstruction classes. We will present two recent applications of this construction: one is the Gromov-Witten invariants of stable maps with fields (joint work with Chang); the other is studying Donaldson-Thomas invariants of Calabi-Yau threefolds (joint work with Kiem).
(HoRSe seminar) Localized virtual cycles, and applications to GW and DT invariants I
Abstract
We first present the localized virtual cycles by cosections of obstruction sheaves constructed by Kiem and Li. This construction has two kinds of applications: one is define invariants for non-proper moduli spaces; the other is to reduce the obstruction classes. We will present two recent applications of this construction: one is the Gromov-Witten invariants of stable maps with fields (joint work with Chang); the other is studying Donaldson-Thomas invariants of Calabi-Yau threefolds (joint work with Kiem).
Wall-crossing and invariants of higher rank stable pairs
Abstract
rank stable pairs (which we call frozen triples) given by the data $(F,\phi)$ where $F$ is a pure coherent sheaf with one dimensional support over $X$ and $\phi:{\mathcal O}^r\rightarrow F$ is a map. We compute the Donaldson-Thomas type invariants associated to the frozen triples using the wall-crossing formula of Joyce-Song and Kontsevich-Soibelman. This work is a sequel to arXiv:1011.6342, where we gave a deformation theoretic construction of a higher rank enumerative theory of stable pairs over a Calabi-Yau threefold, and we computed similar invariants using Graber-Pandharipande virtual localization technique.
Cobordisms of sutured manifolds
Abstract
Sutured manifolds are compact oriented 3-manifolds with boundary, together with a set of dividing curves on the boundary. Sutured Floer homology is an invariant of balanced sutured manifolds that is a common generalization of the hat version of Heegaard Floer homology and knot Floer homology. I will define cobordisms between sutured manifolds, and show that they induce maps on sutured Floer homology groups, providing a type of TQFT. As a consequence, one gets maps on knot Floer homology groups induced by decorated knot cobordisms.
Gravitational instantons from rational elliptic surfaces
Abstract
Gravitational instantons are complete hyperkaehler 4-manifolds whose Riemann curvature tensor is square integrable. They can be viewed as Einstein geometry analogs of finite energy Yang-Mills instantons on Euclidean space. Classical examples include Kronheimer's ALE metrics on crepant resolutions of rational surface singularities and the ALF Riemannian Taub-NUT metric, but a classification has remained largely elusive. I will present a large, new connected family of gravitational instantons, based on removing fibers from rational elliptic surfaces, which contains ALG and ALH spaces as well as some unexpected geometries.
(HoRSe seminar) On the calculus underlying Donaldson-Thomas theory II
Abstract
On a manifold there is the graded algebra of polyvector fields with its Lie-Schouten bracket, and the module of de Rham differentials with exterior differentiation. This package is called a "calculus". The moduli
space of sheaves (or derived category objects) on a Calabi-Yau threefold has a kind of "virtual calculus" on it, at least conjecturally. In particular, this moduli space has virtual de Rham cohomology groups, which categorify Donaldson-Thomas invariants, at least conjecturally. We describe some attempts at constructing such a virtual calculus. This is work in progress.
(HoRSe seminar) On the calculus underlying Donaldson-Thomas theory I
Abstract
On a manifold there is the graded algebra of polyvector fields with its Lie-Schouten bracket, and the module of de Rham differentials with exteriour differentiation. This package is called a "calculus". The moduli space of sheaves (or derived category objects) on a Calabi-Yau threefold has a kind of "virtual calculus" on it, at least conjecturally. In particular, this moduli space has virtual de Rham cohomology groups, which categorify Donaldson-Thomas invariants, at least conjecturally. We describe some attempts at constructing such a virtual calculus. This is work in progress.
15:45
Counting invariants for the ADE McKay quivers
Motivic Donaldson-Thomas invariants and 3-manifolds
Abstract
I will describe recent work on motivic DT invariants for 3-manifolds, which are expected to be a refinement of Chern-Simons theory. The conclusion will be that these should be possible to define and work with, but there will be some interesting problems along the way. There will be a discussion of the problem of upgrading the description of the moduli space of flat connections as a critical locus to the problem of describing the fundamental group algebra of a 3-fold as a "noncommutative critical locus," including a recent topological result on obstructions for this problem. I will also address the question of how a motivic DT invariant may be expected to pick up a finer invariant of 3-manifolds than just the fundamental group.
Topological quantum field theory structure on symplectic cohomology
Abstract
Symplectic cohomology is an invariant of symplectic manifolds with contact type boundary. For example, for disc cotangent bundles it recovers the
homology of the free loop space. The aim of this talk is to describe algebraic operations on symplectic cohomology and to deduce applications in
symplectic topology. Applications range from describing the topology of exact Lagrangian submanifolds, to proving existence theorems about closed
Hamiltonian orbits and Reeb chords.
Finite time singularities for Lagrangian mean curvature flow
Abstract
I will show that given smooth embedded Lagrangian L in a Calabi-Yau, one can find a perturbation of L which lies in the same hamiltonian isotopy class and such that the correspondent solution to mean curvature flow develops a finite time singularity. This shows in particular that a simplified version of the Thomas-Yau conjecture does not hold.
(HoRSe seminar) Spherical objects on K3 surfaces II
Abstract
Both parts will deal with spherical objects in the bounded derived
category of coherent sheaves on K3 surfaces. In the first talk I will
focus on cycle theoretic aspects. For this we think of the Grothendieck
group of the derived category as the Chow group of the K3 surface (which
over the complex numbers is infinite-dimensional due to a result of
Mumford). The Bloch-Beilinson conjecture predicts that over number
fields the Chow group is small and I will show that this is equivalent to
the derived category being generated by spherical objects (which
I do not know how to prove). In the second talk I will turn to stability
conditions and show that a stability condition is determined by its
behavior with respect to the discrete collections of spherical objects.
(HoRSe seminar) Spherical objects on K3 surfaces I
Abstract
Both parts will deal with spherical objects in the bounded derived
category of coherent sheaves on K3 surfaces. In the first talk I will
focus on cycle theoretic aspects. For this we think of the Grothendieck
group of the derived category as the Chow group of the K3 surface (which
over the complex numbers is infinite-dimensional due to a result of
Mumford). The Bloch-Beilinson conjecture predicts that over number
fields the Chow group is small and I will show that this is equivalent to
the derived category being generated by spherical objects (which
I do not know how to prove). In the second talk I will turn to stability
conditions and show that a stability condition is determined by its
behavior with respect to the discrete collections of spherical objects.
(HoRSe seminar) ADHM Sheaves, Wallcrossing, and Cohomology of the Hitchin Moduli Space II
Abstract
The second talk will present conjectural motivic generalizations
of ADHM sheaf invariants as well as their wallcrossing formulas.
It will be shown that these conjectures yield recursive formulas
for Poincare and Hodge polynomials of moduli spaces of Hitchin
pairs. It will be checked in many concrete examples that this recursion relation is in agreement with previous results of Hitchin, Gothen, Hausel and Rodriguez-Villegas.
(HoRSe seminar) ADHM Sheaves, Wallcrossing, and Cohomology of the Hitchin Moduli Space I
Abstract
The first talk will present a construction of equivariant
virtual counting invariants for certain quiver sheaves on a curve, called ADHM sheaves. It will be shown that these invariants are related to the stable pair theory of Pandharipande and Thomas in a specific stability chamber. Wallcrossing formulas will be derived using the theory of generalized Donaldson-Thomas invariants of Joyce and Song.
(HoRSe seminar) Realizations of motives
Abstract
A categorification of cycle class maps consists to define
realization functors from constructible motivic sheaves to other
categories of coefficients (e.g. constructible $l$-adic sheaves), which are compatible with the six operations. Given a field $k$, we
will describe a systematic construction, which associates,
to any cohomology theory $E$, represented in $DM(k)$, a
triangulated category of constructible $E$-modules $D(X,E)$, for $X$
of finite type over $k$, endowed with a realization functor from
the triangulated category of constructible motivic sheaves over $X$.
In the case $E$ is either algebraic de Rham cohomology (with $char(k)=0$), or $E$ is $l$-adic cohomology, one recovers in this way the triangulated categories of $D$-modules or of $l$-adic sheaves. In the case $E$ is rigid cohomology (with $char(k)=p>0$), this construction provides a nice system of $p$-adic coefficients which is closed under the six operations.
(HoRSe seminar) Motivic sheaves over excellent schemes
Abstract
Starting from Morel and Voevodsky's stable homotopy theory of schemes, one defines, for each noetherian scheme of finite dimension $X$, the triangulated category $DM(X)$ of motives over $X$ (with rational coefficients). These categories satisfy all the the expected functorialities (Grothendieck's six operations), from
which one deduces that $DM$ also satisfies cohomological proper
descent. Together with Gabber's weak local uniformisation theorem,
this allows to prove other expected properties (e.g. finiteness
theorems, duality theorems), at least for motivic sheaves over
excellent schemes.
(HoRSe seminar) ''Stability conditions on the local projective plane and $\Gamma_1(3)$-action II'
Abstract
We report on joint work with Arend Bayer on the space of stability conditions for the canonical bundle on the projective plane.
We will describe a connected component of this space, generalizing and completing a previous construction of Bridgeland.
In particular, we will see how this space is related to classical results of Drezet-Le Potier on stable vector bundles on the projective plane. Using this, we can determine the group of autoequivalences of the derived category. As a consequence, we can identify a $\Gamma_1(3)$-action on the space of stability conditions, which will give a global picture of mirror symmetry for this example.
In the second hour we will give some details on the proof of the main theorem.
(HoRSe seminar) 'Stability conditions on the local projective plane and $\Gamma_1(3)$-action I'
Abstract
We report on joint work with Arend Bayer on the space of stability conditions for the canonical bundle on the projective plane.
We will describe a connected component of this space, generalizing and completing a previous construction of Bridgeland.
In particular, we will see how this space is related to classical results of Drezet-Le Potier on stable vector bundles on the projective plane. Using this, we can determine the group of autoequivalences of the derived category. As a consequence, we can identify a $\Gamma_1(3)$-action on the space of stability conditions, which will give a global picture of mirror symmetry for this example.
In the second hour we will give some details on the proof of the main theorem.
Symplectic homology of 4-dimensional Weinstein manifolds and Legendrian homology of links
Abstract
We show how to compute the symplectic homology of a 4-dimensional Weinstein manifold from a diagram of the Legendrian link which is the attaching locus of its 2-handles. The computation uses a combination of a generalization of Chekanov's description of the Legendrian homology of links in standard contact 3-space, where the ambient contact manifold is replaced by a connected sum of $S^1\times S^2$'s, and recent results on the behaviour of holomorphic curve invariants under Legendrian surgery.
Isotopy of Lagrangian submanifolds
Abstract
Lagrangian submanifolds are an important class of objects in symplectic geometry. They arise in diverse settings: as vanishing cycles in complex algebraic geometry, as invariant sets in integrable systems, as Heegaard tori in Heegaard-Floer theory and of course as "branes" in the A-model of mirror symmetry. We ask the difficult question: when are two Lagrangian submanifolds isotopic? Restricting to the simplest case of Lagrangian spheres in rational surfaces we will give examples where this question has a complete answer. We will also give some very pictorial examples (due to Seidel) illustrating how two Lagrangians can fail to be isotopic.
Normal forms for lattice polarized K3 surfaces and the Kuga-Satake Hodge Conjecture II (HoRSe seminar)
Normal forms for lattice polarized K3 surfaces and the Kuga-Satake Hodge Conjecture (HoRSe seminar)
Thom polynomials and the Green-Griffiths conjecture
Abstract
The Green-Griffiths conjecture from 1979 says that every projective algebraic variety $X$ of general type contains a certain proper algebraic subvariety $Y$ such that all nonconstant entire holomorphic curves in $X$ must lie inside $Y$. In this talk we explain that for projective hypersurfaces of degree $d>dim(X)^6$ this is the consequence of a positivity conjecture in global singularity theory.
(HoRSe seminar) Cluster category and applications
Abstract
I will introduce the theory of cluster categories after Amiot and Plamondon. For a quiver with a potential, the cluster category is defined as the quotient of the category of perfect dg-modules by the category of dg-modules with finite dimensional cohomologies. We can show the existence of the equivalence in the first talk as an application of the cluster category. I will also propose a definition of a counting invariant for each element in the cluster category.
(HoRSe seminar) Quiver mutations and stability conditions
Abstract
Let $(Q',w')$ be a quiver with a potential given by successive mutations from a quiver with a potential $(Q,w)$. Then we have an equivalence of the derived categories of dg-modules over the Ginzburg dg-algebras satisfying the following condition: a simple module over the dg-algebra for $(Q',w')$ is either concentrated on degree 0 or concentrated on degree 1 as a dg-module over the
dg-algebra for $(Q,w)$. As an application of this equivalence, I will give a description of the space of stability conditions.
Moduli Spaces of Sheaves on Toric Varieties
Abstract
Extending work of Klyachko, we give a combinatorial description of pure equivariant sheaves on a nonsingular projective toric variety X and use this description to construct moduli spaces of such sheaves. These moduli spaces are explicit and combinatorial in nature. Subsequently, we consider the moduli space M of all Gieseker stable sheaves on X and describe its fixed point locus in terms of the moduli spaces of pure equivariant sheaves on X. As an application, we compute generating functions of Euler characteristics of M in case X is a toric surface. In the torsion free case, one finds examples of new as well as known generating functions. In the pure dimension 1 case using a conjecture of Sheldon Katz, one obtains examples of genus zero Gopakumar-Vafa invariants of the canonical bundle of X.
(HoRSe seminar) Gromov-Witten Invariants and Modular Forms II
Abstract
I will show that generating functions for certain non-compact Calabi-Yau 3-folds are modular forms. This is joint work with Hiroshi Iritani.
(HoRSe seminar) Gromov-Witten Invariants and Modular Forms I
Abstract
I will show that generating functions for certain non-compact
Calabi-Yau 3-folds are modular forms. This is joint work with Hiroshi
Iritani.
Mutations of Quivers in the Minimal Model Programme
Abstract
Following work of Bridgeland in the smooth case and Chen in the terminal singularities case, I will explain a proposal that extends the existence of flops for threefolds (and the required derived equivalences) to also cover canonical singularities. Moreover this technique conjecturally says much more than just the existence of the flop, as it shows how the dual graph changes under the flop and also which curves in the flopped variety contract to points without contracting divisors. This allows us to continue the Minimal Model Programme on the flopped variety in an easy way, thus producing many varieties birational to the given input.
(HoRSe seminar) Symmetric and reduced obstruction theories
Abstract
I will describe some more of the deformation theory necessary for the first talk. This leads to a number of natural questions and counterexamples. This talk requires a strong stomach, or a fanatical devotion to symmetric obstruction theories.
(HoRSe seminar) GW/stable pairs on K3 surfaces
Abstract
(This is joint work with Davesh Maulik and Rahul Pandharipande. Only they understand the actual formulae. People who like modular forms are not encouraged to come to this talk.)
Big rational surfaces
Abstract
The Cox ring of a variety is an analogue of the homogeneous coordinate ring of projective space. Cox rings are not defined for every variety and even when they are defined, they need not be finitely generated. Varieties for which the Cox ring is finitely generated are called Mori dream spaces and, as the name suggests, they are particularly well-suited for the Minimal Model Program. Such varieties include toric varieties and del Pezzo surfaces.
I will report on joint work with T. Várilly and M. Velasco where we introduce a class of smooth projective surfaces having finitely generated Cox ring. This class of surfaces contains toric surfaces and (log) del Pezzo surfaces.
(HoRSe seminar at Imperial College) Moduli of Calabi-Yau 3-folds and instantons on $G_2$ manifolds
Abstract
This talk will be largely speculative. First we consider the formal properties that could be expected of a "topological field theory" in 6+1 dimensions defined by $G_2$ instantons. We explain that this could lead to holomorphic bundles over moduli spaces of Calabi-Yau 3-folds whose ranks are the DT-invariants. We also discuss in more detail the compactness problem for $G_2$ instantons and associative submanifolds.
The talk will be held in Room 408, Imperial College Maths Department, Huxley Building, 180 Queen’s Gate, London.
(HoRSe seminar at Imperial college) Gauge theory and exceptional holonomy
Abstract
This talk will review material, well-known to specialists, on calibrated geometry and Yang-Mills theory over manifolds with holonomy $SU(3)$, $G_2$ or $Spin(7)$. We will also describe extensions of the standard set-up, modelled on Gromov's "taming forms" for almost-complex structures.
The talk will be held in Room 408, Imperial College Maths Department, Huxley Building, 180 Queen’s Gate, London.
Constant scalar curvature orbifold metrics and stability of orbifolds through embeddings in weighted projective spaces
Abstract
There is a conjectural relationship due to Yau-Tian-Donaldson between stability of projective manifolds and the existence of canonical Kahler metrics (e.g. Kahler-Einstein metrics). Embedding the projective manifold in a large projective space gives, on one hand, a Geometric Invariant Theory stability problem (by changing coordinates on the projective space) and, on the other, a notion of balanced metric which can be used to approximate the canonical Kahler metric in question. I shall discuss joint work with Richard Thomas that extends this framework to orbifolds with cyclic quotient singularities using embeddings in weighted projective space, and examples that show how several obstructions to constant scalar curvature orbifold metrics can be interpreted in terms of stability.
Opers, Quot-schemes and Frobenius-destabilised vector bundles over curves
Abstract
In this talk I will introduce and study opers over a smooth projective curve X defined over a field of positive characteristic. I will describe a bijective correspondence between the set of stable vector bundles E over X such that the pull-back F^*(E) under the Frobenius
map F of X has maximal Harder-Narasimhan polygon and the set of opers having zero p-curvature. These sets turn out to be finite, which allows us to derive dimensions of certain Quot-schemes and certain loci of stable Frobenius-destabilized vector bundles over X.