11:00
11:00
15:45
Anosov representations and proper actions
Abstract
15:45
Bordered Floer homology via immersed curves
Abstract
Bordered Floer homology is a variant of Heegaard Floer homology adapted to manifolds with boundary. I will describe a class of three-manifolds with torus boundary for which these invariants may be recast in terms of immersed curves in a punctured torus. This makes it possible to recast the paring theorem in bordered Floer homology in terms of intersection between curves leading, in turn, to some new observations about Heegaard Floer homology. This is joint work with Jonathan Hanselman and Jake Rasmussen.
16:00
Quasi-isometry invariants of groups
Abstract
We will discuss various familiar properties of groups studied in geometric group theory, whether or not they are invariant under quasi-isometry, and why.
16:00
Profinite rigidity of Seifert fibre spaces
Abstract
One can ask whether the fundamental groups of 3-manifolds are distinguished by their sets of finite quotients. I will discuss the recent solution of this question for Seifert fibre spaces.
16:00
Expanders and Warped Cones
Abstract
I will illustrate how to build families of expanders out of 'very mixing' actions on measure spaces. I will then define the warped cones and show how these metric spaces are strictly related with those expanders.
14:30
Excluding Holes
Abstract
A "hole" in a graph is an induced subgraph which is a cycle of length > 3. The perfect graph theorem says that if a graph has no odd holes and no odd antiholes (the complement of a hole), then its chromatic number equals its clique number; but unrestricted graphs can have clique number two and arbitrarily large chromatic number. There is a nice question half-way between them - for which classes of graphs is it true that a bound on clique number implies some (larger) bound on chromatic number? Call this being "chi-bounded".
Gyarfas proposed several conjectures of this form in 1985, and recently there has been significant progress on them. For instance, he conjectured
- graphs with no odd hole are chi-bounded (this is true);
- graphs with no hole of length >100 are chi-bounded (this is true);
- graphs with no odd hole of length >100 are chi-bounded; this is still open but true for triangle-free graphs.
We survey this and several related results. This is joint with Alex Scott and partly with Maria Chudnovsky.
15:45
Minimal surfaces in 3-manifold topology
Abstract
I will explain some recent work using minimal surfaces to address problems in 3-manifold topology. Given a Heegaard splitting, one can sweep out a three-manifold by surfaces isotopic to the splitting, and run the min-max procedure of Almgren-Pitts and Simon-Smith to construct a smooth embedded minimal surface. If the original splitting were strongly irreducible (as introduced by Casson-Gordon), H. Rubinstein sketched an argument in the 80s showing that the limiting minimal surface should be isotopic to the original splitting. I will explain some results in this direction and how jointly with T. Colding and D. Gabai we can use such min-max minimal surfaces to complete the classification problem for Heegaard splittings of non-Haken hyperbolic 3-manifolds.
Modular Forms from the Arithmetic of Singular Calabi-Yau Manifolds
Abstract
I will give an introductory account of the zeta-functions for one-parameter families of CY manifolds. The aim of the talk is to point out that the zeta-functions corresponding to singular manifolds of the family correspond to modular forms. In order to give this introductory account I will give a lightning review of finite fields and of the p-adic numbers.