Forthcoming events in this series
15:45
A cellular decomposition of the Fulton Mac Pherson operad
Abstract
We construct a cellular decomposition of the
Axelrod-Singer-Fulton-MacPherson compactification of the configuration
spaces in the plane, that is compatible with the operad composition.
Cells are indexed by trees with bi-coloured edges, and vertices are labelled by
cells of the cacti operad. This answers positively a conjecture stated in
2000 by Kontsevich and Soibelman.
15:45
Irrationality and monodromy for cubic threefolds
Abstract
The homological monodromy of the universal family of cubic threefolds defines a representation of a certain Artin-type group into the symplectic group Sp(10;\Z). We use Thurston’s classification of surface automorphisms to prove this does not factor through the genus five mapping class group. This gives a geometric group theory perspective on the well-known irrationality of cubic threefolds, as established by Clemens and Griffiths.
15:45
On the smooth mapping class group of the 4-sphere
Abstract
The smooth mapping class group of the 4-sphere is pi_0 of the space of orientation preserving self-diffeomorphisms of S^4. At the moment we have no idea whether this group is trivial or not. Watanabe has shown that higher homotopy groups can be nontrivial. Inspired by Watanabe's constructions, we'll look for interesting self-diffeomorphisms of S^4. Most of the talk will be an outline for a program to find a nice geometric generating set for this mapping class group; a few small steps in the program are actually theorems. The point of finding generators is that if they are explicit enough then you have a hope of either showing that they are all trivial or finding an invariant that is well adapted to obstructing triviality of these generators.
15:45
The Witt vectors with coefficients
Abstract
We will introduce the Witt vectors of a ring with coefficients in a bimodule and use them to calculate the components of the Hill-Hopkins-Ravenel norm for cyclic p-groups. This algebraic construction generalizes Hesselholt's Witt vectors for non-commutative rings and Kaledin's polynomial Witt vectors over perfect fields. We will discuss applications to the characteristic polynomial over non-commutative rings and to the Dieudonné determinant. This is all joint work with Krause, Nikolaus and Patchkoria.
15:45
The Euler characteristic of Out(F_n) and renormalized topological field theory
Abstract
I will report on recent joint work with Karen Vogtmann on the Euler characteristic of $Out(F_n)$ and the moduli space of graphs. A similar study has been performed in the seminal 1986 work of Harer and Zagier on the Euler characteristic of the mapping class group and the moduli space of curves. I will review a topological field theory proof, due to Kontsevich, of Harer and Zagier´s result and illustrate how an analogous `renormalized` topological field theory argument can be applied to $Out(F_n)$.
15:45
Towards Higher Morse-Cerf Theory: Classifying Constructible Bundles on R^n
Abstract
We present a programme towards a combinatorial language for higher (stratified) Morse-Cerf theory. Our starting point will be the interpretation of a Morse function as a constructible bundle (of manifolds) over R^1. Generalising this, we describe a surprising combinatorial classification of constructible bundles on flag foliated R^n (the latter structure of a "flag foliation” is needed for us to capture the notions of "singularities of higher Morse-Cerf functions" independently of differentiable structure). We remark that flag foliations can also be seen to provide a notion of directed topology and in this sense higher Morse-Cerf singularities are closely related to coherences in higher category theory. The main result we will present is the algorithmic decidability of existence of mutual refinements of constructible bundles. Using this result, we discuss how "combinatorial stratified higher Morse-Cerf theory" opens up novel paths to the computational treatment of interesting questions in manifold topology.
15:45
Lower bounds on the tunnel number of composite spatial theta graphs
Abstract
The tunnel number of a graph embedded in a 3-dimensional manifold is the fewest number of arcs needed so that the union of the graph with the arcs has handlebody exterior. The behavior of tunnel number with respect to connected sum of knots can vary dramatically, depending on the knots involved. However, a classical theorem of Scharlemann and Schultens says that the tunnel number of a composite knot is at least the number of factors. For theta graphs, trivalent vertex sum is the operation which most closely resembles the connected sum of knots. The analogous theorem of Scharlemann and Schultens no longer holds, however. I will provide a sharp lower bound for the tunnel number of composite theta graphs, using recent work on a new knot invariant which is additive under connected sum and trivalent vertex sum. This is joint work with Maggy Tomova.
15:45
Uryson width and volume
Abstract
I will give a brief survey of some problems in curvature free geometry and sketch
a new proof of the following:
Theorem (Guth). There is some $\delta (n)>0$ such that if $(M^n,g)$ is a closed aspherical Riemannian manifold and $V(R)$ is the volume of the largest ball of radius $R$ in the universal cover of $M$, then $V(R)\geq \delta(n)R^n$ for all $R$.
I will also discuss some recent related questions and results.
15:45
Action rigidity for free products of hyperbolic manifold groups
Abstract
The relationship between the large-scale geometry of a group and its algebraic structure can be studied via three notions: a group's quasi-isometry class, a group's abstract commensurability class, and geometric actions on proper geodesic metric spaces. A common model geometry for groups G and G' is a proper geodesic metric space on which G and G' act geometrically. A group G is action rigid if every group G' that has a common model geometry with G is abstractly commensurable to G. For example, a closed hyperbolic n-manifold group is not action rigid for all n at least three. In contrast, we show that free products of closed hyperbolic manifold groups are action rigid. Consequently, we obtain the first examples of Gromov hyperbolic groups that are quasi-isometric but do not virtually have a common model geometry. This is joint work with Daniel Woodhouse.
15:45
Derived modular functors
Abstract
For a semisimple modular tensor category the Reshetikhin-Turaev construction yields an extended three-dimensional topological field theory and hence by restriction a modular functor. By work of Lyubachenko-Majid the construction of a modular functor from a modular tensor category remains possible in the non-semisimple case. We explain that the latter construction is the shadow of a derived modular functor featuring homotopy coherent mapping class group actions on chain complex valued conformal blocks and a version of factorization and self-sewing via homotopy coends. On the torus we find a derived version of the Verlinde algebra, an algebra over the little disk operad (or more generally a little bundles algebra in the case of equivariant field theories). The concepts will be illustrated for modules over the Drinfeld double of a finite group in finite characteristic. This is joint work with Christoph Schweigert (Hamburg).
From knots to homotopy theory
Abstract
Knots and their groups are a traditional topic of geometric topology. In this talk, I will explain how aspects of the subject can be approached as a homotopy theorist, rephrasing old results and leading to new ones. Part of this reports on joint work with Tyler Lawson.
Note: unusual time!
15:45
The Teichmüller TQFT volume conjecture for twist knots
Abstract
(joint work with E. Piguet-Nakazawa)
In 2014, Andersen and Kashaev defined an infinite-dimensional TQFT from quantum Teichmüller theory. This Teichmüller TQFT is an invariant of triangulated 3-manifolds, in particular knot complements.
The associated volume conjecture states that the Teichmüller TQFT of an hyperbolic knot complement contains the volume of the knot as a certain asymptotical coefficient, and Andersen-Kashaev proved this conjecture for the first two hyperbolic knots.
In this talk I will present the construction of the Teichmüller TQFT and how we approached this volume conjecture for the infinite family of twist knots, by constructing new geometric triangulations of the knot complements.
No prerequisites in Quantum Topology are needed.
17:00
Curve complexes of Artin groups and Borel-Serre bordifications of hyperplane arrangement complements
Abstract
This is a report on work in progress with Jingyin Huang. The complement of an arrangement of linear hyperplanes in a complex vector space has a natural “Borel-Serre bordification” as a smooth manifold with corners. Its universal cover is analogous to the Borel-Serre bordification of an arithmetic lattice acting on a symmetric space as well as to the Harvey bordification of Teichmuller space. In the first case the boundary of this bordification is homotopy equivalent to a spherical building; in the second case it is homotopy equivalent to curve complex of the surface. In the case of a reflection arrangement the boundary of its universal cover is the “curve complex” of the corresponding spherical Artin group. By definition this is the simplicial complex of all conjugates of proper, irreducible, spherical parabolic subgroups in the Artin group. A cohomological method is used to show that the curve complex of a spherical Artin group has the homotopy type of a wedge of spheres.
15:45
Unitary group integrals, surfaces, and mapping class groups
Abstract
For any word w in a free group of rank r>0, and any compact group G, w induces a `word map' from G^r to G by substitutions of elements of G for the letters of w. We may also choose the r elements of G independently with respect to Haar measure on G, and then apply the word map. This gives a random element of G whose distribution depends on w. An interesting observation is that this distribution doesn't change if we change w by an automorphism of the free group. It is a wide open question whether the measures induced by w on compact groups determine w up to automorphisms.
My talk will be mostly about the case G = U(n), the n by n complex unitary matrices. The technical tool we use is a precise formula for the moments of the distribution induced by w on U(n). In the formula, there is a surprising appearance of concepts from infinite group theory, more specifically, Euler characteristics of mapping class groups of surfaces. I'll explain how our formula allows us to make progress on the question described above.
This is joint work with Doron Puder (Tel Aviv).
15:45
The Tits alternative for two-dimensional Artin groups
Abstract
A group is said to satisfy the Tits Alternative if its finitely generated subgroups exhibit a striking dichotomy: they are either "big" (they contain a non-abelian free subgroup) or "small" (they are virtually soluble). Many groups of geometric interest have been shown to satisfy the Tits Alternative: linear groups, mapping class groups of hyperbolic surfaces, etc. In this talk, I will explain how one can use ideas from group actions in negative curvature to prove such a dichotomy. In particular, I will show how one can prove a strengthening of the Tits Alternative for a large class of Artin groups. This is joint work with Piotr Przytycki.
15:45
Secondary invariants and mock modularity
Abstract
A two-dimensional, minimally Supersymmetric Quantum Field Theory is "nullhomotopic" if it can be deformed to one with spontaneous supersymmetry breaking, including along deformations that are allowed to "flow up" along RG flow lines. SQFTs modulo nullhomotopic SQFTs form a graded abelian group $SQFT_\bullet$. There are many SQFTs with nonzero index; these are definitely not nullhomotopic, and indeed represent nontorision classes in $SQFT_\bullet$. But relations to topological modular forms suggests that $SQFT_\bullet$ also has rich torsion. Based on an analysis of mock modularity and holomorphic anomalies, I will describe explicitly a "secondary invariant" of SQFTs and use it to show that a certain element of $SQFT_3$ has exact order $24$. This work is joint with D. Gaiotto and E. Witten.
15:45
Rational cobordisms and integral homology
Abstract
We prove that every rational homology cobordism class in the subgroup generated
by lens spaces contains a unique connected sum of lens spaces whose first homology embeds in
any other element in the same class. As a consequence we show that several natural maps to
the rational homology cobordism group have infinite rank cokernels, and obtain a divisibility
condition between the determinants of certain 2-bridge knots and other knots in the same
concordance class. This is joint work with Daniele Celoria and JungHwan Park.
15:45
On operads with homological stability
Abstract
In a recent paper, Basterra, Bobkova, Ponto, Tillmann and Yeakel defined
topological operads with homological stability (OHS) and proved that the
group completion of an algebra over an OHS is weakly equivalent to an
infinite loop space.
In this talk, I shall outline a construction which to an algebra A over
an OHS associates a new infinite loop space. Under mild conditions on
the operad, this space is equivalent as an infinite loop space to the
group completion of A. This generalises a result of Wahl on the
equivalence of the two infinite loop space structures constructed by
Tillmann on the classifying space of the stable mapping class group. I
shall also talk about an application of this construction to stable
moduli spaces of high-dimensional manifolds in thesense of Galatius and
Randal-Williams.
15:45
Holomorphic curves and Seiberg-Witten invariants for 4-dimensional cobordisms
Abstract
We will discuss a variant of Taubes’s Seiberg-Witten to Gromov theorem in the context of a 4-manifold with cylindrical ends, equipped with a nontrivial harmonic 2-form. This harmonic 2-form is allowed to be asymptotic to 0 on some (but not all) of its ends, and may have nondegenerate zeros along 1-submanifolds. Corollaries include various positivity results; some simple special cases of these constitute a key ingredient in Kutluhan-Lee-Taubes’s proof of HM = HF (Monopole Floer homology equals Heegaard Floer homology). The aforementioned general theorem is motivated by (potential) extensions of the HM = HF and Lee-Taubes’s HM = PFH (Periodic Floer homology) theorems.
15:45
Knots, SL_2(R) representations, and a total Lin invariant
Abstract
X.S. Lin defined an invariant of knots in S^3 by counting represenations
of the knot group into SU(2) with fixed meridinal holonomy. Lin's
invariant was subsequently shown to coincide with the Levine-Tristam
signature. I'll define an analogous total Lin invariant which counts
repesentations into both SU(2) and SL_2(R). Unlike the SU(2) version, this
invariant does not (as far as I know) coincide with other known
invariants. I'll describe some applications to left-orderability of Dehn
fillings and branched covers, as well as a curious connection with the
Alexander polynomial. This is joint work with Nathan Dunfield.
15:45
Algebraic cobordism categories and Grothendieck-Witt-theory
Abstract
I will explain how Lurie‘s approach to L-theory via Poincaré categories can be extended to yield cobordism categories of Poincaré objects à la Ranicki. These categories can be delooped by an iterated Q-construction and the resulting spectrum is a derived version of Grothendieck-Witt-theory. Its homotopy type can be described in terms of K- and L-theory as conjectured by Hesselholt-Madsen. Furthermore, it has a clean universal property analogous to that of K-theory, localisation sequences in much greater generality than classical Grothendieck-Witt theory, gives a cycle description of Weiss-Williams‘ LA-theory and allows for maps from the geometric cobordism category, refining and unifying various known invariants.
All original material is joint work with B.Calmès, E.Dotto, Y.Harpaz, M.Land, K.Moi, D.Nardin, T.Nikolaus and W.Steimle.
14:15
Invariants for sublinearly biLipschitz equivalence
Abstract
The large-scale features of groups and spaces are recorded by asymptotic invariants. Examples of asymptotic invariants are the asymptotic cone and, for hyperbolic groups, the Gromov boundary.
In his study of asymptotic cones of connected Lie groups, Yves Cornulier introduced a class of maps called sublinearly biLipschitz equivalences. Like the more traditionnal quasiisometries, sublinearly biLipschitz equivalences are biLipschitz on the large-scale, but unlike quasiisometries, they are generally not coarse. Sublinearly biLipschitz equivalences still induce biLipschitz homeomorphisms between asymptotic cones. In this talk, I will focus on Gromov-hyperbolic groups and show how the Gromov boundary can be used to produce invariants distinguishing them up to sublinearly biLipschitz equivalences when the asymptotic cones do not. I will especially give applications to the large-scale sublinear geometry of hyperbolic Lie groups.
15:45
Acylindrically hyperbolic groups with strong fixed point properties
Abstract
The concept of an acylindrically hyperbolic group, introduced by D. Osin, generalizes hyperbolic and relatively hyperbolic groups, and includes many other groups of interest: Out(F_n), n>1, most mapping class groups, directly indecomposable non-cyclic right angled Artin groups, most graph products, groups of deficiency at least 2, etc. Roughly speaking, a group G is acylindrically hyperbolic if there is a (possibly infinite) generating set X of G such that the Cayley graph \Gamma(G,X) is hyperbolic and the action of G on it is "sufficiently nice". Many global properties of hyperbolic/relatively hyperbolic groups have been also proved for acylindrically hyperbolic groups.
In the talk I will discuss a method which allows to construct a common acylindrically hyperbolic quotient for any countable family of countable acylindrically hyperbolic groups. This allows us to produce acylindrically hyperbolic groups with many unexpected properties.(The talk will be based on joint work with Denis Osin.)
15:45
Twisted Blanchfield pairings and Casson-Gordon invariants
Abstract
In the late seventies, Casson and Gordon developed several knot invariants that obstruct a knot from being slice, i.e. from bounding a disc in the 4-ball. In this talk, we use twisted Blanchfield pairings to define twisted generalisations of the Levine-Tristram signature function, and describe their relation to the Casson-Gordon invariants. If time permits, we will present some obstructions to algebraic knots being slice. This is joint work with Maciej Borodzik and Wojciech Politarczyk.
Virtual fibring of manifolds and groups
Abstract
I will discuss Agol's proof of the Virtually Fibred Conjecture of
Thurston, focusing on the role played by the `RFRS' property. I will
then show how one can modify parts of Agol's proof by replacing some
topological considerations with a group theoretic statement about
virtual fibring of RFRS groups.
16:30
Structure of approximate subgroups of nilpotent groups and applications
Abstract
In a joint work with Matt Tointon, we study the fine structure of approximate groups. We deduce various applications on growth, isoperimetry and quantitative estimates for the the simple random walk on finite vertex transitive graphs.
15:30
Cross ratios on cube complexes and length-spectrum rigidity
Abstract
A conjecture from the '80s claims that the isometry type of a closed, negatively curved Riemannian manifold should be uniquely determined by the lengths of its closed geodesics. By work of Otal, this is essentially equivalent to the problem of extending cross-ratio preserving maps between Gromov boundaries of simply connected, negatively curved manifolds. Progress on the conjecture has been remarkably slow, with only the 2-dimensional and locally symmetric cases having been solved so far (Otal '90 and Hamenstädt '99).
Still, it is natural to try leaving the world of manifolds and address the conjecture in the general context of non-positively curved metric spaces. We restrict to the class of CAT(0) cube complexes, as their geometry is both rich and well-understood. We introduce a new notion of cross ratio on their horoboundary and use it to provide a full answer to the conjecture in this setting. More precisely, we show that essential, hyperplane-essential cubulations of Gromov-hyperbolic groups are completely determined by their combinatorial length functions. One can also consider non-proper non-cocompact actions of non-hyperbolic groups, as long as the cube complexes are irreducible and have no free faces.
Joint work with J. Beyrer and M. Incerti-Medici.
14:15
RAAGs and Stable Commutator Length
Abstract
Stable commutator length (scl) is a well established invariant of elements g in the commutator subgroup (write scl(g)) and has both geometric and algebraic meaning. A group has a \emph{gap} in stable commutator length if for every non-trivial element g, scl(g) > C for some C > 0.
SCL may be interpreted as an 'algebraic translation length' and such a gap may be thus interpreted an 'algebraic injectivity radius'.
Many classes of groups have such a gap, like hyperbolic groups, mapping class groups, Baumslag-Solitar groups and graph of groups.
In this talk I will show that Right-Angled Artin Groups have the optimal scl-gap of 1/2. This yields a new invariant for the vast class of subgroups of Right-Angled Artin Groups.
13:15
Quasi-isometric embeddings of symmetric spaces and lattices
Abstract
Symmetric spaces and lattices are important objects to model spaces in geometry and topology. They have been studied from many different viewpoints. We will concentrate on their coarse geometry view point in this talk. I will first quickly go over some well-known results about quasi-isometry of those spaces. Then I will move to the study about quasi-isometric embeddings. While results in this direction are far less complete and well-studied, there are some rigidity phenomenons still happening here.
15:45
Local flexibility for open partial differential relations
Abstract
In his famous book on partial differential relations Gromov formulates an exercise concerning local deformations of solutions to open partial differential relations. We will explain the content of this fundamental assertion and sketch a proof.
In the sequel we will apply this to extend local deformations of closed $G_2$ structures, and to construct
$C^{1,1}$-Riemannian metrics which are positively curved "almost everywhere" on arbitrary manifolds.
This is joint work with Christian Bär (Potsdam).
15:45
Slice discs in stabilized 4-balls
Abstract
We recall the impact of stabilizing a 4-manifold with $S^2 \times S^2$. The corresponding local situation concerns knots in the 3-sphere which bound (nullhomotopic) discs in a stabilized 4-ball. We explain how these discs arise, and discuss bounds on the minimal number of stabilizations needed. Then we compare this minimal number to the 4-genus.
This is joint work with A. Conway.
15:45
Transfers and traces in the algebraic K-theory of spaces
The algebraic K-theory of a space encodes important invariants of the space which are of interest in both homotopy theory and geometric topology.
In this talk, I will discuss properties of transfer maps in the algebraic K-theory of spaces ('wrong-way' maps) in connection with index theorems for (smooth or topological) manifold bundles and also compare these maps with other related constructions such as the Becker-Gottlieb transfer and the Waldhausen trace.
15:45
Dilation of formal groups, and potential applications
Abstract
I will describe an extremely easy construction with formal group laws, and a
slightly more subtle argument to show that it can be done in a coordinate-free
way with formal groups. I will then describe connections with a range of other
phenomena in stable homotopy theory, although I still have many more
questions than answers about these. In particular, this should illuminate the
relationship between the Lambda algebra and the Dyer-Lashof algebra at the
prime 2, and possibly suggest better ways to think about related things at
odd primes. The Morava K-theory of symmetric groups is well-understood
if we quotient out by transfers, but somewhat mysterious if we do not pass
to that quotient; there are some suggestions that dilation will again be a key
ingredient in resolving this. The ring $MU_*(\Omega^2S^3)$ is another
object for which we have quite a lot of information but it seems likely that
important ideas are missing; dilation may also be relevant here.
15:45
Dimension series and homotopy groups of spheres
Abstract
The lower central series of a group $G$ is defined by $\gamma_1=G$ and $\gamma_n = [G,\gamma_{n-1}]$. The "dimension series", introduced by Magnus, is defined using the group algebra over the integers: $\delta_n = \{g: g-1\text{ belongs to the $n$-th power of the augmentation ideal}\}$.
It has been, for the last 80 years, a fundamental problem of group theory to relate these two series. One always has $\delta_n\ge\gamma_n$, and a conjecture by Magnus, with false proofs by Cohn, Losey, etc., claims that they coincide; but Rips constructed an example with $\delta_4/\gamma_4$ cyclic of order 2. On the positive side, Sjogren showed that $\delta_n/\gamma_n$ is always a torsion group, of exponent bounded by a function of $n$. Furthermore, it was believed (and falsely proven by Gupta) that only $2$-torsion may occur.
In joint work with Roman Mikhailov, we prove however that for every prime $p$ there is a group with $p$-torsion in some quotient $\delta_n/\gamma_n$.
Even more interestingly, I will show that the dimension quotient $\delta_n/gamma_n$ is related to the difference between homotopy and homology: our construction is fundamentally based on the order-$p$ element in the homotopy group $\pi_{2p}(S^2)$ due to Serre.
17:00
Lattices and correction terms
Abstract
I will introduce two obstructions for a rational homology 3-sphere to smoothly bound a rational homology 4-ball- one coming from Donaldson's theorem on intersection forms of definite 4-manifolds, and the other coming from correction terms in Heegaard Floer homology. If L is a nonunimodular definite lattice, then using a theorem of Elkies we will show that whether L embeds in the standard definite lattice of the same rank is completely determined by a collection of lattice correction terms, one for each metabolizing subgroup of the discriminant group. As a topological application this gives a rephrasing of the obstruction coming from Donaldson's theorem. Furthermore, from this perspective it is easy to see that if the obstruction to bounding a rational homology ball coming from Heegaard Floer correction terms vanishes, then (under some mild hypotheses) the obstruction from Donaldson's theorem vanishes too.
15:45
Orthogonal group and higher categorical adjoints
Abstract
In this talk I will articulate and contextualize the following sequence of results.
The Bruhat decomposition of the general linear group defines a stratification of the orthogonal group.
Matrix multiplication defines an algebra structure on its exit-path category in a certain Morita category of categories.
In this Morita category, this algebra acts on the category of n-categories -- this action is given by adjoining adjoints to n-categories.
This result is extracted from a larger program -- entirely joint with John Francis, some parts joint with Nick Rozenblyum -- which proves the cobordism hypothesis.
15:45
Random triangular Burnside groups
Abstract
In this talk I will discuss recent joint work with Dominik Gruber where
we find a reasonable model for random (infinite) Burnside groups,
building on earlier tools developed by Coulon and Coulon-Gruber.
The free Burnside group with rank r and exponent n is defined to be the
quotient of a free group of rank r by the normal subgroup generated by
all elements of the form g^n; quotients of such groups are called
Burnside groups. In 1902, Burnside asked whether any such groups could
be infinite, but it wasn't until the 1960s that Novikov and Adian showed
that indeed this was the case for all large enough odd n, with later
important developments by Ol'shanski, Ivanov, Lysenok and others.
In a different direction, when Gromov developed the theory of hyperbolic
groups in the 1980s and 90s, he observed that random quotients of free
groups have interesting properties: depending on exactly how one chooses
the number and length of relations one can typically gets hyperbolic
groups, and these groups are infinite as long as not too many relations
are chosen, and exhibit other interesting behaviour. But one could
equally well consider what happens if one takes random quotients of
other free objects, such as free Burnside groups, and that is what we
will discuss.
15:45
Geodesic Currents and Counting Curves
Abstract
Two curves in a closed hyperbolic surface of genus g are of the same type if they differ by a mapping class. Mirzakhani studied the number of curves of given type and of hyperbolic length bounded by L, showing that as L grows, it is asymptotic to a constant times L^{6g-6}. In this talk I will discuss a generalization of this result, allowing for other notions of length. For example, the same asymptotics hold if we put any (singular) Riemannian metric on the surface. The main ingredient in this generalization is to study measures on the space of geodesic currents.
15:45
Random graphs with constant r-balls
Abstract
Let F be a fixed infinite, vertex-transitive graph. We say a graph G is `r-locally F' if for every vertex v of G, the ball of radius r and centre v in G is isometric to the ball of radius r in F. For each positive integer n, let G_n = G_n(F,r) be a graph chosen uniformly at random from the set of all unlabelled, n-vertex graphs that are r-locally F. We investigate the properties that the random graph G_n has with high probability --- i.e., how these properties depend upon the fixed graph F.
We show that if F is a Cayley graph of a torsion-free group of polynomial growth, then there exists a positive integer r_0 such that for every integer r at least r_0, with high probability the random graph G_n = G_n(F,r) defined above has largest component of size between n^{c_1} and n^{c_2}, where 0 < c_1 < c_2 < 1 are constants depending upon F alone, and moreover that G_n has at least exp(poly(n)) automorphisms. This contrasts sharply with the random d-regular graph G_n(d) (which corresponds to the case where F is replaced by the infinite d-regular tree).
Our proofs use a mixture of results and techniques from group theory, geometry and combinatorics, including a recent and beautiful `rigidity' result of De La Salle and Tessera.
We obtain somewhat more precise results in the case where F is L^d (the standard Cayley graph of Z^d): for example, we obtain quite precise estimates on the number of n-vertex graphs that are r-locally L^d, for r at least linear in d, using classical results of Bieberbach on crystallographic groups.
Many intriguing open problems remain: concerning groups with torsion, groups with faster than polynomial growth, and what happens for more general structures than graphs.
This is joint work with Itai Benjamini (Weizmann Institute).
15:45
From PDEs to groups
Abstract
We present a construction which associates to a KdV equation the lamplighter group.
In order to establish this relation we use automata and random walks on ultra discrete limits.
It is also related to the L2 Betti numbers introduced by Atiyah which are homotopy
invariants of closed manifolds.
15:45
Directed algebraic topology
Abstract
In directed algebraic topology, a topological space is endowed
with an extra structure, a selected subset of the paths called the
directed paths or the d-structure. The subset has to contain the
constant paths, be closed under concatenation and non-decreasing
reparametrization. A space with a d-structure is a d-space.
If the space has a partial order, the paths increasing wrt. that order
form a d-structure, but the circle with counter clockwise paths as the
d-structure is a prominent example without an underlying partial order.
Dipaths are dihomotopic if there is a one-parameter family of directed
paths connecting them. Since in general dipaths do not have inverses,
instead of fundamental groups (or groupoids), there is a fundamental
category. So already at this stage, the algebra is less desirable than
for topological spaces.
We will give examples of what is currently known in the area, the kind
of methods used and the problems and questions which need answering - in
particular with applications in computer science in mind.
15:45
Formal Moduli Problems via Partition Lie Algebras
Abstract
If k is a field of characteristic zero, a theorem of Lurie and Pridham establishes an equivalence between formal moduli problems and differential graded Lie algebras over k. We generalise this equivalence in two different ways to arbitrary ground fields by using “partition Lie algebras”. These mysterious new gadgets are intimately related to the genuine equivariant topology of the partition complex, which allows us to access the operations acting on their homotopy groups (relying on earlier work of Dyer-Lashof, Priddy, Goerss, and Arone-B.). This is joint work with Mathew.
15:45
The loop space homology of a small category
Abstract
In an article published in 2009, Dave Benson described, for a finite group $G$, the mod $p$ homology of the space $\Omega(BG^\wedge_p)$ --- the loop space of the $p$-completion of $BG$ --- in purely algebraic terms. In joint work with Carles Broto and Ran Levi, we have tried to better understand Benson's result by generalizing it. We showed that when $\mathcal{C}$ is a small category, $|\mathcal{C}|$ is its geometric realization, $R$ is a commutative ring, and $|\mathcal{C}|^+_R$ is a plus construction of $|\mathcal{C}|$ with respect to homology with coefficients in $R$, then $H_*(\Omega(|\mathcal{C}|^+_R);R)$ is the homology any chain complex of projective $R\mathcal{C}$-modules that satisfies certain conditions. Benson's theorem is then the special case where $\mathcal{C}$ is the category associated to a finite group $G$ and $R=F_p$, so that $p$-completion is a special case of the plus construction.
15:45
Semi-stability in Nonpositive curvature
Abstract
A proper simply connected one-ended metric space is call semi-stable if any two proper rays are properly homotopic. A finitely presented group is called semi-stable if the universal cover of its presentation 2-complex is semi-stable.
It is conjectured that every finitely presented group is semi-stable. We will examine the known results for the cases where the group in question is relatively hyperbolic or CAT(0).
15:45
Moduli stacks of vacua in geometric representation theory
Abstract
Topological field theories give rise to a wealth of algebraic structures, extending
the E_n algebra expressing the "topological OPE of local operators". We may interpret these algebraic structures as defining (slightly noncommutative) algebraic varieties and stacks, called moduli stacks of vacua, and relations among them. I will discuss some examples of these structures coming from the geometric Langlands program and their applications. Based on joint work with Andy Neitzke and Sam Gunningham.
17:00
Growth of groups, isoperimetry and random walks
Abstract
Answering a question of Milnor, Grigorchuk constructed in the early eighties the
first examples of groups of intermediate growth, that is, finitely generated
groups with growth strictly between polynomial and exponential.
In joint work with Laurent Bartholdi, we show that under a mild regularity assumption, any function greater than exp(n^a), where `a' is a solution of the equation
2^(3-3/x)+ 2^(2-2/x)+2^(1-1/x)=2,
is a growth function of some group. These are the first examples of groups
of intermediate growth where the asymptotic of the growth function is known.
Among applications of our results is the fact that any group of locally subexponential growth
can be embedded as a subgroup of some group of intermediate growth (some of these latter groups cannot be subgroups in Grigorchuk groups).
In a recent work with Tianyi Zheng, we provide near optimal lower bounds
for Grigorchuk torsion groups, including the first Grigorchuk group. Our argument is by a construction of random walks with non-trivial Poisson boundary, defined by
a measure with power law decay.
15:45
Heegaard Floer, taut foliations, and regions of rational surgery slopes
Abstract
Recent tools make it possible to partition the space of rational Dehn
surgery slopes for a knot (or in some cases a link) in a 3-manifold into
domains over which the Heegaard Floer homology of the surgered manifolds
behaves continuously as a function of slope. I will describe some
techniques for determining the walls of discontinuity separating these
domains, along with efforts to interpret some aspects of this structure
in terms of the behaviour of co-oriented taut foliations. This talk
draws on a combination of independent work, previous joint work with
Jake Rasmussen, and work in progress with Rachel Roberts.
15:45
Topological field theory on r-spin surfaces and the Arf invariant
Abstract
We present a state-sum construction of TFTs on r-spin surfaces which
uses a combinatorial model of r-spin structures. We give an example of
such a TFT which computes the Arf invariant for r even. We use the
combinatorial model and this TFT to calculate diffeomorphism classes of
r-spin surfaces with parametrized boundary.
15:45
Unbounded rank expanders, property (T), and upgrading
Abstract
The problem of "unbounded rank expanders" asks
whether we can endow a system of generators with a sequence of
special linear groups whose degrees tend to infinity over quotient rings
of Z such that the resulting Cayley graphs form an expander family.
Kassabov answered this question in the affirmative. Furthermore, the
completely satisfactory solution to this question was given by
Ershov and Jaikin--Zapirain (Invent. Math., 2010); they proved
Kazhdan's property (T) for elementary groups over non-commutative
rings. (T) is equivalent to the fixed point property with respect to
actions on Hilbert spaces by isometries.
We provide a new framework to "upgrade" relative fixed point
properties for small subgroups to the fixed point property for the
whole group. It is inspired by work of Shalom (ICM, 2006). Our
main criterion is stated only in terms of intrinsic group structure
(but *without* employing any form of bounded generation).
This, in particular, supplies a simpler (but not quantitative)
alternative proof of the aforementioned result of Ershov and
Jaikin--Zapirain.
If time permits, we will discuss other applications of our result.