Events

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Eamonn Tweedy (Widener University)

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Title: The co-rank of three-dimensional homology handlebody groups Abstract: A group G is called very large if G has a non-abelian free quotient.  We examine the question of which three-manifolds have very large fundamental group.  This question is especially subtle for a three-dimensional homology handlebody of genus g, since the fundamental group of such a

Colloquium – Dan Margalit (Georgia Institute of Technology)

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Title: Algebraic, geometric, and dynamical aspects of surfaces Abstract: Taffy pullers, lab stirrers, and paint mixers are complicated dynamical systems.  To any such system we can ascribe a real number, called the entropy, which describes the amount of mixing being achieved.  Which real numbers arise, and what do they say about the dynamics of the

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Heather Werth (University of Alabama)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Computation of extension spaces in $kQ$-mod, for $kQ$ the path algebra of a quiver $Q$ of type $\tilde A(n-1,1)$, using planar curves. Abstract: The representation theory of quivers is important to the representation theory of associative algebras in general. If $Q$ is a quiver of affine type $\tilde A(n-1,1)$ and $k$ a fixed algebraically

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Jonathan Simone (Georgia Institute of Technology)

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Title: The non-orientable 4-ball genus of torus knots Abstract: The non-orientable 4-ball genus of a knot $K$ in $S^3$ is the minimal first Betti number of any smoothly embedded non-orientable surface in $B^4$ bounded by K. This is the non-orientable analog of the 4-ball genus of $K$ (i.e. the minimal genus of any smooth orientable surface

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Surena Hozoori (Georgia Tech)

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Title: On Anosovity, divergence and bi-contact surgery Abstract: I will revisit the relation between Anosov 3-flows and invariant volume forms, from a contact geometric point of view. Consequently, I will give a contact geometric characterization of when a flow with dominated splitting is Anosov based on its divergence, as well as a Reeb dynamical interpretation

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Subhankar Dey (University of Alabama)

346 Gordon Palmer Hall 505 Hackberry Lane, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Detection results in link Floer homology  Abstract: In this talk I will briefly describe link Floer homology toolbox and its usefulness. Then I will show how link Floer homology can detect links with small ranks, using a rank bound for fibered links by generalizing an existing result for knots. I will also show that stronger

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Austin Christian (Georgia Tech)

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Title: Symplectic fillings of lens spaces Abstract: Many contact 3-manifolds arise as boundaries of symplectic 4-manifolds, and we are often interested in the filling problem for a given contact 3-manifold.  That is, how many symplectic 4-manifolds have the given contact boundary?  This problem has previously been solved for standard contact structures on lens spaces.  We use

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Alberto Cavallo (CIRGET/Renyi Institute)

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Title: Slice links and smooth 4-manifolds Abstract: We vary the trace embedding lemma in order to prove results about smooth, closed, simply connected 4-manifolds, studying smoothly slice links in them. We focus on homotopy 4-spheres, which are potential counterexamples to the smooth 4-dimensional Poincaré conjecture. In particular, we split them, as for exotic R^4's,  in large and

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Orsola-Capovilla Searle (UC Davis)

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Title: Infinitely many Lagrangian Tori in Milnor fibers constructed via Lagrangian Fillings of Legendrian links Abstract: One approach to studying symplectic manifolds with contact boundary is to consider Lagrangian submanifolds with Legendrian boundary; in particular, one can study exact Lagrangian fillings of Legendrian links. There are still many open questions on the spaces of exact Lagrangian fillings

Algebra/Topology Seminar – Johnny Nicholson (Imperial College)

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Title: The homotopy type of a finite 2-complex with non-minimal Euler characteristic Abstract: Two presentations for a group G which have the same deficiency are called exotic if the corresponding presentation complexes are not homotopy equivalent. The first examples of exotic presentations were found by Dunwoody and Metzler in the 1970s but, owing to the difficulty of