16:00
Word fibers in finite p-groups
Abstract
For a finitely generated group $G$ with subgroup $H$ we define $e(G,H)$, the relative ends of the pair $(G,H)$, to be the number of ends of the Cayley graph of G quotiented out by the left action of H. We will examine some basic properties of relative ends and will outline the theorem of Sageev showing that $e(G,H)>1$ if and only if $G$ acts essentially on a simply connected CAT(0) cube complex. If time permits, we will outline Niblo's proof of Stallings' theorem using Sageev's construction.
In 1954 Thom showed that there is an isomorphism between the cobordism groups of manifolds and the homotopy groups of the Thom spectrum. I will define what these words mean and present the explicit, geometric construction of the isomorphism.
A basic result in Morse theory due to Reeb states that a compact manifold which admits a smooth function with only two, non-degenerate critical points is homeomorphic to the sphere. We shall apply this idea to distance function associated to a Riemannian metric to prove the diameter-sphere theorem of Grove-Shiohama: A complete Riemannian manifold with sectional curvature $\geq 1$ and diameter $> \pi / 2$ is homeomorphic to a sphere. I shall not assume any knowledge about curvature for the talk.
I will discuss the theory of branched covers of cube complexes as a method of hyperbolisation. I will show recent results using this technique. Time permitting I will discuss a form of Morse theory on simplicial complexes and show how these methods combined with the earlier methods allow one to create groups with interesting finiteness properties.
I will introduce the profinite completion as a way of aggregating information about the finite-sheeted covers of a 3-manifold, and discuss the state of the homeomorphism problem for 3-manifolds in this context; in particular, for geometrizable 3-manifolds.
Deformation K-theory was introduced by G. Carlsson and gives an interesting invariant of a group G encoding higher homotopy information about its representation spaces. Lawson proved a relation between this object and a homotopy theoretic analogue of the representation ring. This talk will not contain many details, instead I will outline some basic constructions and hopefully communicate the main ideas.
Abstract: Four manifolds are some of the most intriguing objects in topology. So far, they have eluded any attempt of classification and their behaviour is very different from what one encounters in other dimensions. On the other hand, Einstein metrics are among the canonical types of metrics one can find on a manifold. In this talk I will discuss many of the peculiarities that make dimension four so special and see how Einstein metrics could potentially help us understand more about four manifolds.
Our work (which is joint with Simon Smith) began as a study of the structure of infinite permutation groups $G$ in which point stabilisers are finite and all infinite normal subgroups are transitive. That led to two variations.
One is the generalisation in which point stabilisers are merely assumed to satisfy min-{\sc N}, the minimal condition on normal subgroups. The groups $G$ are then of two kinds. Either they have a maximal finite normal subgroup, modulo which they have either one or two minimal non-trivial normal subgroups, or they have a regular normal subgroup $M$ which is a divisible abelian $p$-group of finite rank. In the latter case the point stabilisers are finite and act irreducibly on the socle of~$M$. This leads to our second variation, which is a study of the finite linear groups that can arise.
One way of understanding groups is by investigating their actions on special spaces, such as Hilbert and Banach spaces, non-positively curved spaces etc. Classical properties like Kazhdan property (T) and the Haagerup property are formulated in terms of such actions and turn out to be relevant in a wide range of areas, from the conjectures of Baum-Connes and Novikov to constructions of expanders. In this talk I shall overview various generalisations of property (T) and Haagerup to Banach spaces, especially in connection with classes of groups acting on non-positively curved spaces.