12:00
Simple supersymmetric scattering amplitudes in higher dimensions
Abstract
In field theory simple forms of certain scattering amplitudes in four dimensional theories with massless particles are known. This has been shown to be closely related to underlying (super)symmetries and has been a source of inspiration for much development in the last years. Away from four dimensions much less is known with some concrete development only in six dimensions. I will show how to construct promising on-shell superspaces in eight and ten dimensions which permit suggestively simple forms of supersymmetric four point scattering amplitudes with massless particles. Supersymmetric on-shell recursion relations which allow one to compute in principle any amplitude are constructed, as well as the three point `seed' amplitudes to make these work. In the three point case I will also present some classes of supersymmetric amplitudes with a massive particle for the type IIB superstring in a flat background.
Length and degree distortion in groups and algebras
Abstract
Distortion is an asymptotic invariant of the embeddings
of finitely generated algebras. For group embeddings,
it has been introduced by M.Gromov. The main part of
the talk will be based on a recent work with Yu.Bahturin,
where we consider the behavior of distortion functions
for subalgebras of associative and Lie algebras.
The classification of subfactors of small index and the onset of wilderness
Abstract
In the 1990's Haagerup discovered a new subfactor, and hence a new topological quantum field theory, that has so far proved inaccessible by the methods of quantum groups and conformal field theory. It was the subfactor of smallest index beyond 4. This led to a classification project-classify all subfactors to as large an index as possible. So far we have gone as far as index 5. It is known that at index 6 wildness phenomena occur which preclude a simple listing of all subfactors of that index. It is possible that wildness occurs at a smaller index value, the main candidate being approximately 5.236.
Examples of aspherical hyperbolic simplicial complexes. An application of small cancellation for rotation families of groups
Abstract
The goal of this talk is to construct new examples of hyperbolic
aspherical complexes. More precisely, given an aspherical simplicial
complex P and a subcomplex Q of P, we are looking for conditions under
which the complex obtained by attaching a cone of base Q on P remains
aspherical. If Q is a set of loops of a 2-dimensional complex, J.H.C.
Whitehead proved that this new complex is aspherical if and only if the
elements of the fundamental group of P represented by Q do not satisfy
any identity. To deal with higher dimensional subcomplexes we use small
cancellation theory and extend the geometric point of view developed by
T. Delzant and M. Gromov to rotation families of groups. In particular
we obtain hyperbolic aspherical complexes obtained by attaching a cone
over the "real part" of a hyperbolic complex manifold.
The Kakimizu complex of a link
Abstract
We give an introduction to the Kakimizu complex of a link,
covering a number of recent results. In particular we will see that the
Kakimizu complex of a knot may be locally infinite, that the Alexander
polynomial of an alternating link carries information about its Seifert
surfaces, and that the Kakimizu complex of a special alternating link is
understood.