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31 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Masoud Khalkhali (Western) "Random Matrix Theory (III)" Time: 12:30 Room: MC 107 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Aji Dhillon (Western) "Quotient stacks as root stacks" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 Being a root stack imposes strong conditions on inertia groups. Given a group acting on an algebraic variety I will discuss when these conditions are fulfilled and the resulting quotient turns out to be a root stack. This joint work with Ivan Kobyzev uses some fundamental theorems of algebraic geometry, Abhyankar's lemma, the Chevellary-Shephard-Todd theorem and Luna's etale slice theorem. These results will be introduced. |
1 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Benoit Charbonneau (Waterloo) "Analytic aspects of the Nahm transform for spatially periodic instantons" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 The study of instantons on the infinite cylinder $\mathbb{R} \times \mathbb{T}^3$ is facilitated by the Nahm transform, a sort of non-linear Fourier transform for connections. Proving that the Nahm transform does what one believes it should do is a task requiring input from geometric analysis and algebraic geometry. This talk focuses on the geometric analysis aspects. This is joint work with Jacques Hurtubise. Speaker's web page: http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/~bcharbon/ |
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3 Homotopy Theory
Homotopy Theory Speaker: Luis Scoccola (Western) "Adjoint functors between quasicategories" Time: 13:00 Room: MC 107 We will generalize the concept of adjoint functors to the
theory of quasicategories. |
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7 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Marton Hablicsek (Univ. of Pennsylvania) "Derived intersection over the Hochschild cochain complex" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 In this talk I generalize a result of Behrend-Fantechi and Baranovski-Ginzburg to the 1-shifted cotangent bundle of a smooth scheme over the complex numbers. More precisely, I show how twisted cotangent bundles arise as derived intersection of Lagrangians inside the 1-shifted cotangent bundle, and how quantizations of the twisted cotangent bundles arise as derived tensor products of quantized Lagrangians. |
8 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Rob Corless (Western) "The Gamma Function in the Monthly" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 The American Mathematical Monthly has published over fifty papers on the Gamma function, factorials, or Stirling's formula.* In this talk I review (some of!) what's been said, identify some surprising lacunae, and give some easy new results. Some of this work was joint with Jonathan M. Borwein. *One of the papers won its author, Philip J. Davis, the Chauvenet Prize in 1963. Another paper's author, Manjul Bhargava, won the 2014 Fields Medal. Other notable authors include Richard Askey, Bruce Berndt, and Walter Rudin. Speaker's homepage: http://www.apmaths.uwo.ca/~rcorless/ |
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10 Homotopy Theory
Homotopy Theory Speaker: Luis Scoccola (Western) "Yoneda embedding for quasicategories" Time: 13:00 Room: MC 107 We will discuss some basic properties of the quasicategory
of spaces, presenting in particular the quasicategorical analog of theYoneda embedding. |
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14 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Pal Zsamboki (Western) "Semi-direct products of infinity-group sheaves" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 We would like to get a Lie algebra functor a la SGA3 for infinity-group sheaves $G$. There, this process is based on the semi-direct product $1 \to Lie(G) \to T(G) \to G \to 1$. Therefore, we classify semi-direct products of infinity-group sheaves. |
15 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Edward Bierstone (Toronto) "Global smoothing of a subanalytic set" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 Semialgebraic and subanalytic sets have become
ubiquitous in mathematics since their introduction by Lojasiewicz in the 1960s, following the famous Tarski-Seidenberg theorem on quantifier elimination. I will discuss two long-standing questions in real-analytic geometry, on global smoothing of a subanalytic set (an analogue of resolution of singularities), and on transformation of a proper real-analytic mapping to a mapping with equidimensional fibres by global blowings-up of the target (a classical result in the complex-analytic case). These questions are related: a positive answer to the second
can be used to reduce the first to the simpler semianalytic
case. It turns out that the second question has a negative
answer, in general, and the first nevertheless has a positive solution. Speaker's web page: http://www.math.toronto.edu/bierston/ |
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17 Homotopy Theory
Homotopy Theory Speaker: Marco Vergura (Western) "Complete Segal Spaces" Time: 13:00 Room: MC 107 We will introduce Complete Segal spaces and prove they describe an equivalent homotopy theory to the one of quasi-categories. Colloquium
Colloquium Speaker: Pierre Guillot (Strasbourg) "Massey products and Galois cohomology" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 Massey products are, originally, operations defined in the
context of algebraic topology, on cohomology rings. However, when one
specializes to group cohomology, work of Dwyer shows that the study of
these operations amounts to that of elementary extension problems,
involving the group of unipotent matrices over a finite field. When we
specialize further, and consider Galois groups in particular, an
ambitious conjecture predicts that Massey products always vanish. This
has been actually proved for triple Massey products, in complete
generality. In this talk, I will describe joint work with Minac, Tan, Topaz
and Wittenberg, showing that the conjecture is true for fourfold
Massey products in the cohomology of number fields.
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21 Geometry and Topology
Geometry and Topology Speaker: Matthew Young (Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong) "Higher Segal spaces, Hall algebras and their representations" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 Higher Segal spaces, as introduced by Dyckerhoff and Kapranov, are simplicial spaces which obey combinatorial locality conditions governed by polyhedral decompositions of cyclic polytopes. Amongst other places, higher Segal spaces have found applications in homological mirror symmetry and the theory of higher categories. In this talk I will introduce a relative notion of higher Segal spaces and focus on one particular aspect of the theory- the construction of categorified Hall algebra representations.
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22 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Rasul Shafikov (Western) "On dicritical singularities of Levi-flat hypersurfaces" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 I will discuss a recent joint work with S. Pinchuk and A. Sukhov on characterization of dicritical singularities of Levi-flat hypersurfaces through the geometry of Segre varieties. Speaker's web page: http://www-home.math.uwo.ca/~shafikov/ |
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24 Homotopy Theory
Homotopy Theory Speaker: Marco Vergura (Western) "Simplicial and relative categories" Time: 13:00 Room: MC 107 We describe how simplicial and relative categories form a model of $(\infty ,1)$-categories. Colloquium
Colloquium Speaker: Kiumars Kaveh (Pittsburgh) "Tropical geometry for matrix groups" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 I will give an introduction to tropical geometry. The main philosophy is that the limit at infinity of algebraic objects (i.e. things defined by polynomials) are piecewise linear objects. Roughly speaking, the "tropical variety" of an algebraic variety is a polyhedral complex (i.e. a union of convex polyhedrons) which encodes the behavior at infinity of the variety. The fundamental theorem of tropical geometry states that different ways to define the tropical variety, using valuation map, initial ideals and (min, +) algebra are the same. Tropical geometry is intimately related to the Grobner basis theory as well as toric geometry. Finally, I will explain new developments to extend tropical geometry to subvarieties in matrix groups (e.g. GL(n)). Singular values of matrices and Smith normal forms make an appearance. For the most part the talk should be understandable for anybody with basic knowledge of algebra and geometry e.g. knowing the definition of a polynomial. |
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29 Analysis Seminar
Analysis Seminar Speaker: Hadi Seyedinejad (Western) "Irreducibility in real algebraic geometry (Part I)" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 108 The notion of irreducibility in the conventional Zariski topology is too coarse for real algebraic sets. For example, the hyperbola xy=1 is an irreducible algebraic set which is not even connected in the Euclidean topology. Cartan umbrella is another irreducible algebraic set, which is connected, but decomposes into the union of a 'sheet' and a 'stick.' Inspired by Nash and his notion of 'sheets,' one might require then to distinguish, as called by Kurdyka, the 'rigid pieces' of a real algebraic set. We will review different approaches to defining irreducibility and irreducible components in real algebraic geometry, in which more 'good' functions than just polynomials should be considered. We may work with the ring of Nash functions, continuous rational functions, or, most notably, arc-analytic functions. Nash functions are able to detect two components for the hyperbola xy=1. Continuous rational functions are able to detect a sheet and a stick component for Cartan umbrella. But we find examples in which only the phenomenon called 'arc-symmetricity' can among the others realize a decomposition. Speaker's web page: http://www.math.uwo.ca/index.php/profile/59/ |
30 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Bogdan Nica (McGill University) "Hyperbolic groups and Noncommutative Geometry" Time: 12:30 Room: MC 107 C*-algebras associated to groups provide some of the most interesting and most important examples in Noncommutative Geometry. In this respect, hyperbolic groups have, time and again, proved to be particularly exciting. I will discuss three vignettes illustrating this idea. |
1 Homotopy Theory
Homotopy Theory Speaker: James Richardson (Western) "Presentable infinity categories" Time: 13:00 Room: MC 107 I will introduce presentable quasicategories and discuss some of their properties. I will then discuss their relationship with combinatorial model categories. Colloquium
Colloquium Speaker: Pinaki Mondal (School of Mathematics, Physics and Technology at The College of the Bahamas) "Milnor number, intersection multiplicity and number of zeroes of systems of polynomials" Time: 15:30 Room: MC 107 We talk about two of the original problems that shaped the
theory of Newton polyhedra: the problem of computing the Milnor number of
the singularity at the origin of a generic polynomial, and computing the
number of zeroes of generic polynomials. The former was addressed by
Kushnirenko, who gave a beautiful formula in terms of Newton diagrams in a
special case.Bernstein (following work of Kushnirenko) solved completely
the latter problem for the case of (C^*)^n. In the case of C^n the problem
was partially solved following the work of Khovanskii, Huber-Sturmfels,
and many others. We give complete solution to both these problems. A
common theme in our solution to both problems is the computation of
intersection multiplicity at the origin of the hypersurfaces determined by
n generic polynomials. |
2 Noncommutative Geometry
Noncommutative Geometry Speaker: Masoud Khalkhali (Western) "Random Matrix Theory (IV)" Time: 12:30 Room: MC 106 |
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