Date
Fri, 24 Nov 2023
Time
15:00 - 16:00
Location
L5
Speaker
Ulrich Bauer
Organisation
TU Munich

I will discuss various aspects of multi-parameter persistence related to representation theory and decompositions into indecomposable summands, based on joint work with Magnus Botnan, Steffen Oppermann, Johan Steen, Luis Scoccola, and Benedikt Fluhr.

A classification of indecomposables is infeasible; the category of two-parameter persistence modules has wild representation type. We show [1] that this is still the case if the structure maps in one parameter direction are epimorphisms, a property that is commonly satisfied by degree 0 persistent homology and related to filtered hierarchical clustering. Furthermore, we show [2] that indecomposable persistence modules are dense in the interleaving distance, and that being nearly-indecomposable is a generic property of persistence modules. On the other hand, the two-parameter persistence modules arising from interleaved sets (relative interleaved set cohomology) have a very well-behaved structure [3] that is encoded as a complete invariant in the extended persistence diagram. This perspective reveals some important but largely overlooked insights about persistent homology; in particular, it highlights a strong reason for working at the level of chain complexes, in a derived category [4].

 

[1] Ulrich Bauer, Magnus B. Botnan, Steffen Oppermann, and Johan Steen, Cotorsion torsion triples and the representation theory of filtered hierarchical clustering, Adv. Math. 369 (2020), 107171, 51. MR4091895

[2] Ulrich Bauer and Luis Scoccola, Generic multi-parameter persistence modules are nearly indecomposable, 2022.

[3] Ulrich Bauer, Magnus Bakke Botnan, and Benedikt Fluhr, Structure and interleavings of relative interlevel set cohomology, 2022.

[4] Ulrich Bauer and Benedikt Fluhr, Relative interlevel set cohomology categorifies extended persistence diagrams, 2022.

 

Further Information

Ulrich Bauer is an associate professor (W3) in the department of mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM), leading the Applied & Computational Topology group. His research revolves around application-motivated concepts and computational methods in topology and geometry, popularized by application areas such as topological data analysis. Some of his key research areas are persistent homology, discrete Morse theory, and geometric complexes.

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