Mon, 14 Oct 2024
15:30
L5

The complexity of knots

Marc Lackenby
((Oxford University) )
Abstract

In his final paper in 1954, Alan Turing wrote `No systematic method is yet known by which one can tell whether two knots are the same.' Within the next 20 years, Wolfgang Haken and Geoffrey Hemion had discovered such a method. However, the computational complexity of this problem remains unknown. In my talk, I will give a survey on this area, that draws on the work of many low-dimensional topologists and geometers. Unfortunately, the current upper bounds on the computational complexity of the knot equivalence problem remain quite poor. However, there are some recent results indicating that, perhaps, knots are more tractable than they first seem. Specifically, I will explain a theorem that provides, for each knot type K, a polynomial p_K with the property that any two diagrams of K with n_1 and n_2 crossings differ by at most p_K(n_1) + p_K(n_2) Reidemeister moves.

Mon, 11 Nov 2024
15:30
L5

Two-generator subgroups of free-by-cyclic groups

Edgar Bering
(San José State University)
Abstract

In general, the classification of finitely generated subgroups of a given group is intractable. Restricting to two-generator subgroups in a geometric setting is an exception. For example, a two-generator subgroup of a right-angled Artin group is either free or free abelian. Jaco and Shalen proved that a two-generator subgroup of the fundamental group of an orientable atoroidal irreducible 3-manifold is either free, free-abelian, or finite-index. In this talk I will present recent work proving a similar classification theorem for two generator mapping-torus groups of free group endomorphisms: every two generator subgroup is either free or conjugate to a sub-mapping-torus group. As an application we obtain an analog of the Jaco-Shalen result for free-by-cyclic groups with fully irreducible atoroidal monodromy. While the statement is algebraic, the proof technique uses the topology of finite graphs, a la Stallings. This is joint work with Naomi Andrew, Ilya Kapovich, and Stefano Vidussi.
 

Mon, 17 Feb 2025
14:15
L5

Curve counting and spaces of Cauchy-Riemann operators

Aleksander Doan
(University College London)
Abstract

It is a long-standing open problem to generalize sheaf-counting invariants of complex projective three-folds to symplectic manifolds of real dimension six. One approach to this problem involves counting  J-holomorphic curves  C, for a generic almost complex structure J, with weights depending on J. Various existing symplectic invariants (Gromov-Witten, Gopakumar-Vafa, Bai-Swaminathan) can be expressed as such weighted counts. In this talk, based on joint work with Thomas Walpuski, I will discuss a new construction of weights associated with curves and a closely related problem about the structure of the space of Cauchy-Riemann operators on  C.

Wed, 24 Jul 2024
11:00
L5

Dehn functions of nilpotent groups

Jerónimo García-Mejía
(KIT)
Abstract

Since Gromov's celebrated polynomial growth theorem, the understanding of nilpotent groups has become a cornerstone of geometric group theory. An interesting aspect is the conjectural quasiisometry classification of nilpotent groups. One important quasiisometry invariant that plays a significant role in the pursuit of classifying these groups is the Dehn function, which quantifies the solvability of the world problem of a finitely presented group. Notably, Gersten, Holt, and Riley's work established that the Dehn function of a nilpotent group of class $c$ is bounded above by $n^{c+1}$.  

In this talk, I will explain recent results that allow us to compute Dehn functions for extensive families of nilpotent groups arising as central products. Consequently, we obtain a large collection of pairs of nilpotent groups with bilipschitz equivalent asymptotic cones but with different Dehn functions.

This talk is based on joint work with Claudio Llosa Isenrich and Gabriel Pallier.

Tue, 23 Jul 2024
18:30
L5

Dehn functions of nilpotent groups

Jerónimo García-Mejía
(KIT)
Abstract

Since Gromov's celebrated polynomial growth theorem, the understanding of nilpotent groups has become a cornerstone of geometric group theory. An interesting aspect is the conjectural quasiisometry classification of nilpotent groups. One important quasiisometry invariant that plays a significant role in the pursuit of classifying these groups is the Dehn function, which quantifies the solvability of the world problem of a finitely presented group. Notably, Gersten, Holt, and Riley's work established that the Dehn function of a nilpotent group of class $c$ is bounded above by $n^{c+1}$.  

In this talk, I will explain recent results that allow us to compute Dehn functions for extensive families of nilpotent groups arising as central products. Consequently, we obtain a large collection of pairs of nilpotent groups with bilipschitz equivalent asymptotic cones but with different Dehn functions.

This talk is based on joint work with Claudio Llosa Isenrich and Gabriel Pallier.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024

14:00 - 15:00
L5

Decision problems in one-relation semigroups

Carl-Fredrik Nyberg Brodda
(KIAS)
Abstract

I will give an overview and introduction to the most important decision problems in combinatorial semigroup theory, including the word problem, and describe attempts to solve a problem that has been open since 1914: the word problem in one-relation semigroups. I will link it with some of my results from formal language theory, as well as recent joint work with I. Foniqi and R. D. Gray (East Anglia) on proving undecidability of certain harder problems, proved by way of passing via one-relator groups.

Tue, 11 Jun 2024
11:00
L5

Renormalised Amperean area for 2D Higgs-Yang-Mills Field

Dr Isao Sauzedde
(University of Warwick)
Abstract

The objective of the talk is to present elements of Euclidean Quantum Field Theory and of the Symanzik's polymer representation for a model which includes an interaction with a magnetic field. We will explain how the problem of constructing such an EQFT can be translated into the problem of renormalising the Amperean area of a planar Brownian motion, an object that we will introduce during the talk. No prerequisite knowledge of the topic is expected.

Based on http://perso.ens-lyon.fr/isao.sauzedde/square_field3_3.pdf 

Mon, 27 May 2024
15:30
L5

Non-semisimple link and manifold invariants: on algebraically strong invariants

Azat Gainutdinov
(CNRS, Université de Tours)
Abstract

I will talk about link and three-manifold invariants defined in terms of a non-semisimple finite ribbon category C together with a choice of tensor ideal and a trace on it. If the ideal is all of C, these invariants agree with those defined by Lyubashenko in the 90’s, and as we show, they only depend on the Grothendieck class of the objects labelling the link. These invariants are therefore not able to determine non-split extensions, or they are algebraically weak. However, we observed an interesting phenomenon: if one chooses an intermediate proper ideal between C and the minimal ideal of projective objects, the invariants become algebraically much stronger because they do distinguish non-trivial extensions. This is demonstrated in the case of C being the super-modular category of an exterior algebra. That is why these invariants deserve to be called “non-semisimple”. This is a joint work with J. Berger and I. Runkel.

Tue, 14 May 2024

14:00 - 15:00
L5

Deformations of q-symmetric algebras and log symplectic varieties

Travis Schedler
(Imperial College, London)
Abstract

We consider quadratic deformations of the q-symmetric algebras A_q given by x_i x_j = q_{ij} x_j x_i, for q_{ij} in C*.   We explicitly describe the Hochschild cohomology and compute the weights of the torus action (dilating the x_i variables). We describe new families of filtered deformations of A_q, which are Koszul and Calabi—Yau algebras. This also applies to abelian category deformations of coh(P^n), and for n=3 we give examples having no homogeneous coordinate ring.  We then focus on the case where n is even and the deformations are obtainable from deformation quantisation of toric log symplectic structures on P^n.  In this case we construct formally universal families of quadratic algebras deforming A_q, obtained by tensoring filtered deformations and FeiginOdesskii elliptic algebras. The universality is a consequence of a beautiful combinatorial classification of deformations via "smoothing diagrams", a collection of disjoint cycles and segments in the complete graph on n vertices, viewed as the dual complex for the coordinate hyperplanes in P^{n-1}.  Already for n=5 there are 40 of these, mostly entirely new. Our proof also applies to deformations of Poisson structures, recovering the P^n case of our previous results on general log symplectic varieties with normal crossings divisors, which motivated this project.  This is joint work with Mykola Matviichuk and Brent Pym.

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