Mon, 10 Feb 2020
15:45
L6

Variants of Quantum sl(2) and invariants of links involving flat connections

Christian Blanchet
(Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu (Paris 7))
Abstract

Witten-Reshetikhin-Turaev quantum invariants of links and 3 dimensional manifolds are obtained from quantum sl(2). There exist different versions of quantum sl(2) leading to other families of invariants. We will briefly overview the original construction and then discuss two variants. First one, so called unrolled quantum sl(2), allows construction of invariants of 3-manifolds involving C* flat connections. In simplest case it recovers Reidemeister torsion. The second one is the non restricted version at a root of unity. It enables construction of invariants of links equipped with a gauge class of SL(2,C) flat connection. This is based respectively on joined work with Costantino, Geer, Patureau and Geer, Patureau, Reshetikhin.

Thu, 27 Feb 2020
12:00
L4

New solutions to the stationary and dissipative Ginzburg-Landau model

Juan Davila
(University of Bath)
Abstract

I will describe new solutions to the stationary Ginzburg-Landau equation in 3 dimensions with vortex lines given by interacting helices, with degree one around each filament and total degree an arbitrary positive integer. I will also present results on the asymptotic behavior of vortices in the entire plane for a dissipative Ginzburg-Landau equation. This is work in collaboration with Manuel del Pino, Remy Rodiac, Maria Medina, Monica Musso and Juncheng Wei.

Mon, 24 Feb 2020
12:45
L3

Quantizing superstrings in AdS/CFT, perturbatively and beyond

Valentina Forini
(City University London)
Abstract

String sigma-models relevant in the AdS/CFT correspondence are highly non-trivial two-dimensional field theories for which predictions at finite coupling exist, assuming integrability and/or the duality itself.  I will discuss general features of the perturbative approach to these models, and present progress on how to go extract finite coupling information in the most possibly general way, namely via the use of lattice field theory techniques. I will also present new results on certain ``defect-CFT’' correlators  at strong coupling. 

Mon, 17 Feb 2020
15:45
L6

Coarse geometry of spaces and groups

David Hume
(Oxford University)
Abstract


Given two metric spaces $X$ and $Y$, it is natural to ask how faithfully, from the point of view of the metric, one can embed $X$ into $Y$. One way of making this precise is asking whether there exists a coarse embedding of $X$ into $Y$. Positive results are plentiful and diverse, from Assouad's embedding theorem for doubling metric spaces to the elementary fact that any finitely generated subgroup of a finitely generated group is coarsely embedded with respect to word metrics. Moreover, the consequences of admitting a coarse embedding into a sufficiently nice space can be very strong. By contrast, there are few invariants which provide obstructions to coarse embeddings, leaving many seemingly elementary geometric questions open.
I will present new families of invariants which resolve some of these questions. Highlights of the talk include a new algebraic dichotomy for connected unimodular Lie groups, and a method of calculating a lower bound on the conformal dimension of a compact Ahlfors-regular metric space.
 

Tue, 11 Feb 2020
12:00
L4

Asymptotic charges in gravity

Mahdi Godazgar
(Queen Mary College, London)
Abstract

 I will give an overview of my recent research on the definition of asymptotic charges in asymptotically flat spacetimes, including the definition of subleading and dual BMS charges and the relation to the conserved Newman-Penrose charges at null infinity.

 

Mon, 27 Apr 2020
15:45
Virtual

On homological stability for configuration-section spaces

Martin Palmer
(IMAR)
Abstract

For a bundle E over a manifold M, the associated "configuration-section spaces" are spaces of configurations of points in M together with a section of E over the complement of the configuration. One often considers subspaces where the behaviour of the section near a configuration point -- a kind of "monodromy" -- is restricted or prescribed. These are examples of "non-local configuration spaces", and may be interpreted physically as moduli spaces of "fields with prescribed singularities" in an ambient manifold.

An important class of examples is given by Hurwitz spaces, which are moduli spaces of branched G-coverings of the 2-disc, and which are homotopy equivalent to certain configuration-section spaces on the 2-disc. Ellenberg, Venkatesh and Westerland proved that, under certain conditions, Hurwitz spaces are (rationally) homologically stable; from this they then deduced an asymptotic version of the Cohen-Lenstra conjecture for function fields, a purely number-theoretical result.

We will discuss another homological stability result for configuration-section spaces, which holds (with integral coefficients) whenever the base manifold M is connected and open. We will also show that the "stabilisation maps" are split-injective (in all degrees) whenever dim(M) is at least 3 and M is either simply-connected or its handle dimension is at most dim(M) - 2.

This represents joint work with Ulrike Tillmann.

Thu, 06 Feb 2020
11:30
C4

Partial associativity and rough approximate groups

Jason Long
((Oxford University))
Abstract

 

Given a finite set X, is an easy exercise to show that a binary operation * from XxX to X which is injective in each variable separately, and which is also associative, makes (X,*) into a group. Hrushovski and others have asked what happens if * is only partially associative - do we still get something resembling a group? The answer is known to be yes (in a strong sense) if almost all triples satisfy the associative law. In joint work with Tim Gowers, we consider the so-called `1%' regime, in which we only have an epsilon fraction of triples satisfying the associative law. In this regime, the answer turns out to be rather more subtle, involving certain group-like structures which we call rough approximate groups. I will discuss these objects, and try to give a sense of how they arise, by describing a somewhat combinatorial interpretation of partial associativity.
 

Mon, 09 Mar 2020
15:45
L6

Non-uniquely ergodic arational trees in the boundary of Outer space

Radhika Gupta
(Bristol University)
Abstract

The mapping class group of a surface is associated to its Teichmüller space. In turn, its boundary consists of projective measured laminations. Similarly, the group of outer automorphisms of a free group is associated to its Outer space. Now the boundary contains equivalence classes of arationaltrees as a subset. There exist distinct projective measured laminations that have the same underlying geodesic lamination, which is also minimal and filling. Such geodesic laminations are called `non-uniquely ergodic'. I will talk briefly about laminations on surfaces and then present a construction of non-uniquely ergodic phenomenon for arational trees. This is joint work with Mladen Bestvina and Jing Tao.

Mon, 02 Mar 2020
15:45
L6

Obstructing isotopies between surfaces in four manifolds

Hannah Schwartz
(Max Planck Institute Bonn)
Abstract

We will first construct pairs of homotopic 2-spheres smoothly embedded in a 4-manifold that are smoothly equivalent (via an ambient diffeomorphism preserving homology) but not even topologically isotopic. Indeed, these examples show that Gabai's recent "4D Lightbulb Theorem" does not hold without the 2-torsion hypothesis. We will proceed to discuss two distinct ways of obstructing such an isotopy, as well as related invariants which can be used to obstruct an isotopy between pairs of properly embedded disks (rather than spheres) in a 4-manifold.

Mon, 24 Feb 2020
15:45
L6

Square pegs and non-orientable surfaces

Marco Golla
(Universite de Nantes)
Abstract

The square peg problem asks whether every Jordan curve in the
plane contains the vertices of a square. Inspired by Hugelmeyer's approach
for smooth curves, we give a topological proof for "locally 1-Lipschitz"
curves using 4-dimensional topology.

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