13:00
Optimal transport, Ricci curvature, and gravity compactifications
Abstract
In the talk, I will start by recalling some basics of optimal transport and how it can be used to define Ricci curvature lower bounds for singular spaces, in a synthetic sense. Then, I will present some joint work with De Luca-De Ponti and Tomasiello, where we show that some singular spaces, naturally showing up in gravity compactifications (namely, Dp-branes), enter the aforementioned setting of non-smooth spaces satisfying Ricci curvature lower bounds in a synthetic sense. Time permitting, I will discuss some applications to the Kaluza-Klein spectrum.
Cartan subalgebras of twisted groupoid $C^*$-algebras with a focus on $k$-graph $C^*$-algebras
Abstract
The set $M_n(\mathbb{R})$ of all $n \times n$ matrices over the real numbers is an example of an algebraic structure called a $C^*$-algebra. The subalgebra $D$ of diagonal matrices has special properties and is called a \emph{Cartan subalgebra} of $M_n(\mathbb{R})$. Given an arbitrary $C^*$-algebra, it can be very hard (but also very rewarding) to find a Cartan subalgebra, if one exists at all. However, if the $C^*$-algebra is generated by a cocycle $c$ and a group (or groupoid) $G$, then it is natural to look within $G$ for a subgroup (or subgroupoid) $S$ that may give rise to a Cartan subalgebra. In this talk, we identify sufficient conditions on $S$ and $c$ so that the subalgebra generated by $(S,c)$ is indeed a Cartan subalgebra of the $C^*$-algebra generated by $(G,c)$. We then apply our theorem to $C^*$-algebras generated by $k$-graphs, which are directed graphs in higher dimensions. This is joint work with J. Briones Torres, A. Duwenig, L. Gallagher, E. Gillaspy, S. Reznikoff, H. Vu, and S. Wright.
Between 1905 and 1910 the idea of the random walk was invented simultaneously and independently by multiple people in multiple countries for completely different purposes. In the UK, the story starts with Ronald Ross and the problem of mosquito control, but elsewhere, the theory was being developed in domains from physics to finance to winning a theological argument (really!).