Fri, 16 Feb 2024

12:00 - 13:00
Quillen Room

Periodic modules and perverse equivalences

Alfred Dabson
(City University London)
Abstract

Perverse equivalences, introduced by Chuang and Rouquier, are derived equivalences with a particularly nice combinatorial description. This generalised an earlier construction, with which they proved Broué’s abelian defect group conjecture for blocks of the symmetric groups. Perverse equivalences are of much wider significance in the representation theory of finite dimensional symmetric algebras. Grant has shown that periodic algebras admit perverse autoequivalences. In a similar vein, I will present some perverse equivalences arising from certain periodic modules, with an application to the setting of the symmetric groups.

Fri, 05 May 2023

12:00 - 13:00
C5

The first Hochschild cohomology of twisted group algebras

William Murphy
(City University London)
Abstract

Given a group G and a field k, we can "twist" the multiplication of the group algebra kG by a 2-cocycle, and the result is a twisted group algebra. Twisted group algebras arise as direct sums of blocks of group algebras, and so are of interest in representation and block theory. In this talk we will discuss some recently obtained results on the first Hochschild cohomology of twisted group algebras, in particular that these cohomology groups are nontrivial whenever G is a finite simple group.

Tue, 07 Mar 2023
14:00
L6

The anti-spherical Hecke categories for Hermitian symmetric pairs

Maud De Visscher
(City University London)
Abstract

Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials are remarkable polynomials associated to pairs of elements in a Coxeter group W. They describe the base change between the standard and Kazhdan-Lusztig bases for the corresponding Hecke algebra. They were discovered by Kazhdan and Lusztig in 1979 and have found applications throughout representation theory and geometry. In 1987, Deodhar introduced the parabolic Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials associated to a Coxeter group W and a standard parabolic subgroup P. These describe the base change between the standard and Kazhdan-Lusztig bases for the anti-spherical module for the Hecke algebra. (We recover the original definition of Kazhdan and Lusztig by taking the trivial parabolic subgroup).

(Anti-spherical) Hecke categories first rose to mathematical celebrity as the centrepiece of the proof of the (parabolic) Kazhdan-Lusztig positivity conjecture. The Hecke category categorifies the Hecke algebra and the anti-spherical Hecke category categorifies the anti-spherical module. More precisely, it was shown by Elias-Williamson (and Libedinsky-Williamson) that the (parabolic) Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials are precisely the graded decomposition numbers for the (anti-spherical) Hecke categories over fields of characteristic zero, hence proving positivity of their coefficients.
The (anti-spherical) Hecke categories can be defined over any field. Their graded decomposition numbers over fields of positive characteristic p, the so-called (parabolic) p-Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials, have been shown to have deep connections with the modular representation theory of reductive groups and symmetric groups. However, these polynomials are notoriously difficult to compute.
Unlike in the case of the ordinary (parabolic) Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials, there is not even a recursive algorithm to compute them in general.
In this talk, I will discuss the representation of the anti-spherical Hecke categories for (W,P) a Hermitian symmetric pair, over an arbitrary field. In particular, I will explain why the decomposition numbers are characteristic free in this case.
This is joint work with C. Bowman, A. Hazi and E. Norton.

Fri, 03 Jun 2022

12:00 - 13:00
L5

Entanglement Measures in Quantum Field Theory: An Approach Based on Symmetry Fields

Olalla Castro Alvaredo
(City University London)
Further Information

Jointly with Relativity

Abstract

In this talk I will review some of the key ideas behind
the study of entanglement measures in 1+1D quantum field theories employing
the so-called branch point twist field approach. This method is based on the
existence of a one-to-one correspondence between different entanglement
measures and different multi-point functions of a particular type of
symmetry field. It is then possible to employ standard methods for the
evaluation of correlation functions to understand properties of entanglement
in bipartite systems. Time permitting, I will then present a recent
application of this approach to the study of a new entanglement measure: the
symmetry resolved entanglement entropy.

Fri, 03 Jun 2022

12:00 - 13:00
L5

Entanglement Measures in Quantum Field Theory: An Approach Based on Symmetry Fields

Dr Olalla Castro Alvaredo
(City University London)
Abstract

In this talk I will review some of the key ideas behind the study of entanglement measures in 1+1D quantum field theories employing the so-called branch point twist field approach. This method is based on the existence of a one-to-one correspondence between different entanglement measures and different multi-point functions of a particular type of symmetry field. It is then possible to employ standard methods for the evaluation of correlation functions to understand properties of entanglement in bipartite systems. Time permitting, I will then present a recent application of this approach to the study of a new entanglement measure: the symmetry resolved entanglement entropy.

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. 

Fri, 15 Jun 2018

15:00 - 16:00
L6

"A counterexample to the first Zassenhaus conjecture".

Florian Eisele
(City University London)
Abstract

There are many interesting problems surrounding the unit group U(RG) of the ring RG, where R is a commutative ring and G is a finite group. Of particular interest are the finite subgroups of U(RG). In the seventies, Zassenhaus conjectured that any u in U(ZG) is conjugate, in the group U(QG), to an element of the form +/-g, where g is an element of the group G. This came to be known as the "(first) Zassenhaus conjecture". I will talk about the recent construction of a counterexample to this conjecture (this is joint work with L. Margolis), and recent work on related questions in the modular representation theory of finite groups.

Thu, 24 Aug 2017

14:00 - 15:00
L6

On Hochschild cohomology and global/local structures

Lleonard Rubio y Degrassi
(City University London)
Abstract

Abstract: In this talk I will discuss the interplay between the local and
the global invariants in modular representation theory with a focus on the
first Hochschild cohomology $\mathrm{HH}^1(B)$ of a block algebra $B$. In
particular, I will show the compatibility between $r$-integrable 
derivations
and stable equivalences of Morita type. I will also show that if
$\mathrm{HH}^1(B)$ is a simple Lie algebra such that $B$ has a unique
isomorphism class of simple modules, then $B$ is nilpotent with an
elementary abelian defect group $P$ of order at least 3. The second part 
is joint work with M. Linckelmann.

Tue, 07 Mar 2017
14:15
L4

The rationality of blocks of quasi-simple finite groups

Niamh Farrell
(City University London)
Abstract

The Morita Frobenius number of an algebra is the number of Morita equivalence classes of its Frobenius twists. Morita Frobenius numbers were introduced by Kessar in 2004 in the context of Donovan’s Conjecture in block theory. I will present the latest results of a project in which we aim to calculate the Morita Frobenius numbers of the blocks of quasi-simple finite groups. I will also discuss the importance of a recent result of Bonnafe-Dat-Rouquier for our methods, and explain the relationship between Morita Frobenius numbers and Donovan’s Conjecture. 

Mon, 30 Jan 2017

14:15 - 15:15
L4

Quivers, Dessins and Calabi-Yau

Yang-hui He
(City University London)
Abstract

We discuss how bipartite graphs on Riemann surfaces encapture a wealth of information about the physics and the mathematics of gauge theories. The
correspondence between the gauge theory, the underlying algebraic geometry of its space of vacua, the combinatorics of dimers and toric varieties, as
well as the number theory of dessin d'enfants becomes particularly intricate under this light.

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