Decoupling Decorations on Moduli Spaces of Manifolds
BONATTO, L Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society volume 174 issue 1 163-198 (10 Jan 2023)
Tue, 29 Nov 2022
15:00
L3

The rates of growth in a hyperbolic group

Koji Fujiwara
Abstract

I discuss the set of rates of growth of a finitely generated 
group with respect to all its finite generating sets. In a joint work 
with Sela, for a hyperbolic group, we showed that the set is 
well-ordered, and that each number can be the rate of growth of at most 
finitely many generating sets up to automorphism of the group. I may 
discuss its generalization to acylindrically hyperbolic groups.

Tue, 22 Nov 2022
15:00
L5

Morse Theory for complexes of groups

Vidit Nanda
Abstract

We will describe a new equivariant version of discrete Morse theory designed specially for quotient objects X/G which arise naturally in geometric group theory from actions of finite groups G on finite simplicial complexes X. Our main tools are (A) a reconstruction theorem due to Bridson and Haefliger which recovers X from X/G decorated with stabiliser data, and (B) a 2-categorical upgrade of discrete Morse theory which faithfully captures the underlying homotopy type. Both tools will be introduced during the course of the talk. This is joint work with Naya Yerolemou.

Tue, 15 Nov 2022
15:00
L5

Embedding spaces of split links

Rachael Boyd
Abstract

This is joint work with Corey Bregman. We study the homotopy type of embedding spaces of unparameterised links, inspired by work of Brendle and Hatcher. We obtain a simple description of the fundamental group of the embedding space, which I will describe for you. Our main tool is a homotopy equivalent semi-simplicial space of separating spheres. As I will explain, this is a combinatorial object that provides a gateway to studying the homotopy type of embedding spaces of split links via the homotopy type of their individual pieces. 

Tue, 08 Nov 2022
15:00
L5

Hyperbolic one-relator groups

Marco Linton
Abstract

Since their introduction by Gromov in the 80s, a wealth of tools have been developed to study hyperbolic groups. Thus, when studying a class of groups, a characterisation of those that are hyperbolic can be very useful. In this talk, we will turn to the class of one-relator groups. In previous work, we showed that a one-relator group not containing any Baumslag--Solitar subgroups is hyperbolic, provided it has a Magnus hierarchy in which no one-relator group with a so called `exceptional intersection' appears. I will define one-relator groups with exceptional intersection, discuss the aforementioned result and will then provide a characterisation of the hyperbolic one-relator groups with exceptional intersection. Finally, I will then discuss how this characterisation can be used to establish properties for all one-relator groups.

Tue, 01 Nov 2022
15:00
L5

Thickness and relative hyperbolicity for graphs of multicurves

Kate Vokes
Abstract

Various graphs associated to surfaces have proved to be important tools for studying the large scale geometry of mapping class groups of surfaces, among other applications. A seminal paper of Masur and Minsky proved that perhaps the most well known example, the curve graph, is Gromov hyperbolic. However, this is not the case for every naturally defined graph associated to a surface. We will present joint work with Jacob Russell classifying a wide family of graphs associated to surfaces according to whether the graph is Gromov hyperbolic, relatively hyperbolic or not relatively hyperbolic.
 

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