Max Dehn Seminar
Past Talks
January 23, 2008Christopher Cashen, University of Utah Quasi-isometries between tubular groupsJanuary 30, 2008Christopher Cashen, University of Utah Quasi-isometries between tubular groups, IIFebruary 6, 2008Dariusz Wilcznski, Utah State University Composition Algebras and the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra for Polynomial Equations with a Tame TailFebruary 13, 2008Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah Can higher rank lattices embed in Out(F_n)?February 27, 2008Benson Farb, University of Chicago Analogies and contrasts between Riemann's moduli space and locally symmetric spacesMarch 5, 2008Yves de Cornulier, University of Rennes Lie groups, their Dehn functions, and their asymptotic conesApril 2, 2008Kevin Wortman, University of Utah Cohomology of rank one arithmetic groups over function fieldsApril 10, 2008Alexander Fel'shtyn, Boise State University Groups with proerty R∞ and twisted Burnside-Frobenius theoremApril 16, 2008Daniel Allcock, University of Texas at Austin The Hurwitz monodromy problem in degree 4September 17, 2008Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah A hyperbolic Out(F_n)-complex, Part ISeptember 24, 2008Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah A New Proof of Morita's TheoremOctober 3, 2008Jean-Francois Lafont, The Ohio State University A introduction to algebraic K-theoryOctober 8, 2008Yael Algom Kfir, University of Utah Negative curvature phenomena in outer spaceOctober 22, 2008Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah A hyperbolic Out(F_n)-complex, Part IINovember 12, 2008Ken Bromberg, University of Utah Convexity of length functions on Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates for Teichmuller spaceNovember 29, 2008Ian Biringer, University of Chicago Geometry and rank of closed hyperbolic 3-manifoldsDecember 3, 2008Julien Paupert, University of Utah Discrete complex reflection groups in PU(2,1)January 21, 2009Kevin Wortman, University of Utah Dehn functions of linear groupsJanuary 28, 2009Kevin Wortman, University of Utah Dehn functions of linear groups IIFebruary 4, 2009Kai-Uwe Bux, University of Virginia Thompson's group V is linear (or at least, it should be)V has subgroups that are so close to being a BN-pair
that the classical proof for simplicity of linear groups with
irreducible Coxeter system goes through almost without change.
It turns out that the subgroup F plays the role of the solvable
Borel subgroup. [joint work with Jim Belk]
March 27, 2009Martin Bridgeman, Boston College Orthospectra of GEodesic LaminationsGiven a measured lamination on a finite area hyperbolic surface we
consider a natural measure M on the real line obtained by taking the
push-forward of the volume measure of the unit tangent bundle of the surface
under an intersection function associated with the lamination. We show that
the measure M gives summation identities for the Rogers dilogarithm function
on the moduli space of a surface.
April 9, 2009Robert Young, IHES The Dehn function of SL(n,Z)The Dehn function is a group invariant which connects geometric and
combinatorial group theory; it measures both the difficulty of the
word problem and the area necessary to fill a closed curve in an
associated space with a disc. The behavior of the Dehn function for
high-rank lattices in high-rank symmetric spaces has long been an open
question; one particularly interesting case is SL(n,Z). Thurston
conjectured that SL(n,Z) has a quadratic Dehn function when n>=4.
This differs from the behavior for n=2 (when the Dehn function is
linear) and for n=3 (when it is exponential). In this talk, I will
discuss some of the background of the problem and sketch a proof that
the Dehn function of SL(n,Z) is at most quartic when n >= 5.
April 22, 2009Natasa Macura, University of Utah/ Trinity University TBAApril 30, 2009Matt Stover, University of Texas at Austin Volumes of Picard modular surfacesPicard modular surfaces are the non-compact arithmetic complex hyperbolic
2-orbifolds. I will prove that the two orbifolds studied by John Parker as
candidates for orbifolds of smallest volume are indeed the unique
arithmetic complex hyperbolic 2-orbifolds of minimal volume. Given time, I
will also make some remarks on finding minimal volume manifolds.
May 6, 2009Valerio Pascucci, Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute, University of Utah Multi-scale Morse Theory for Scientific Data AnalysisAdvanced techniques for understanding large scale scientific data are
a crucial ingredient in modern science discovery. Developing such
techniques involves a number of major challenges in management of
massive data, and quantitative analysis of scientific features of
unprecedented complexity. Addressing these challenges requires
interdisciplinary research in diverse topics including the
mathematical foundations of data representations, algorithmic design,
and the integration with applications in physics, biology, or
medicine.
In this talk, I will present a set of case in the use of Morse theory
for the representation and analysis of large-scale scientific data.
Due to the combinatorial nature of the approach, we can implement the
core constructs of Morse theory without the approximations and
instabilities of classical numerical techniques. We use topological
cancellations to build multi-scale representations that capture local
and global trends present in the data. The inherent robustness of our
combinatorial algorithms allows us to address the high complexity of
the feature extraction problem for high-resolution scientific data.
September 2, 2009Jing Tao, University of Utah Linearly bounded conjugator property for mapping class groupsGiven two conjugate mapping classes f and g, we produce a conjugating element w such that |w| ≤ K (|f| + |g|), where |·| denotes the word metric with respect to a fixed generating set, and K is a constant depending only on the generating set. As a consequence, the conjugacy problem for mapping class groups is exponentially bounded.
September 9, 2009Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah Asymptotic
dimension of Mapping class groupsThe first talk will review the concept of asymptotic dimension and
some background material. In the second talk I will construct (many)
actions of mapping class groups on quasi-trees, and show how this
implies that mapping class groups have finite asymptotic dimension.
This is joint work with Ken Bromberg and Koji Fujiwara.
September 16, 2009 No TalkSeptember 23, 2009Martin Deraux, University of Grenoble I (Institut Fourier) Pinching questions for manifolds of negative curvatureSeptember 30, 2009Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah Asymptotic
dimension of Mapping class groups, cont.The first talk will review the concept of asymptotic dimension and
some background material. In the second talk I will construct (many)
actions of mapping class groups on quasi-trees, and show how this
implies that mapping class groups have finite asymptotic dimension.
This is joint work with Ken Bromberg and Koji Fujiwara.
October 7, 2009Christopher Cashen, University of Utah Mapping Tori of Free Group Automorphisms and Line Patterns in Free GroupsI will talk about line patterns in free groups and how they provide quasi-isometry invariants for mapping tori of linearly growing free group automorphisms. This is joint with Natasha Macura.
October 14, 2009 No Talk, Fall BreakOctober 21, 2009 No TalkOctober 28, 2009William Malone, University of Utah Isometries of Products of Uniquely Geodesic Metric Spaces with the Sup Norm are ReducibleLet f be an isometry between spaces which are products of uniquely geodesic metric spaces with the sup norm. There are two obvious types of isometries from such a space to itself namely a permutation of the factor spaces and a product of isometries of the factor spaces. In this talk we will show that not only is the number of factor spaces an isometry invariant, but also that any isometry is a composition of the two isometries types mentioned above.
November 11, 2009Yael Algom-Kfir, University of Utah Asymmetry of Outer SpaceThe Lipschitz metric on Outer Space is not symmetric. In fact
d(x,y)/d(y,x) can be arbitrarily large. In joint work with Mladen
Bestvina, we define a piecewise differentiable function \psi on Outer
Space (which is invariant under the action of Out(Fn) and show that d(x,y)
can be bounded in terms of d(y,x) and \psi(x) - \psi(y). I will discuss
the proof of this theorem and some applications.
November 18, 2009Kevin Wortman, University of Utah Non-nonpositive curvature of some non-cocompact arithmetic groupsI'll explain why arithmetic groups of relative Q-type A_n, B_n, C_n, D_n, E_6, and E_7 satisfy an exponential isoperimetric inequality in some dimension.
November 25, 2009 No Talk, Thanksgiving weekTBADecember 2, 2009Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah A new proof of the train track theoremJanuary 13, 2010Kasra Rafi, University of Oklahoma Lengths of curves along a Teichmüller geodesicWe show that the extremal length and the hyperbolic length
of any simple closed curve
are quasi-convex functions of time along any Teichmüller geodesic. As
a corollary, we conclude
that, in Teichmüller space equipped with the Teichmüller metric, balls
are quasi-convex.
(Joint work with Anna Lenzhen.)
January 20, 2010 Talk CanceledJanuary 27, 2010Juan Souto, University of Michigan (Non)-actions of the mapping class group on the unit tangent bundle.By the work of Morita and Markovic, it is known that the
mapping class group of a surface $S$ does not act naturally on $S$.
However, such an action, by Hoelder homeomorphisms, exists on the unit
tangent bundle $T^1S$ of the surface. In this talk I will explain why
this last action is conjugated to a Lipschitz action but not even
homotopic to a smooth one.
January 29, 2010Alexandra Pettet, University of Michigan Note special day, time, location. Friday at 1:45 in LCB 219.Periodic maximal flats are not peripheralI will prove that every finite volume locally symmetric space contains a
compact set K with the property that no periodic maximal flat can be
homotoped to be disjoint from K. This is joint work with Juan Souto.
February 3, 2010Jeno Szigeti, Miskolc, Hungary Centralizers in Endomorphism RingsFebruary 10, 2010Jing Tao, University of Utah Teichmuller diameter of the thick part of moduli spaceLet S be a closed surface of genus g >= 2. The thick part of
the moduli space of S is the set of hyperbolic metrics on S such that
the length of the shortest loop is bounded below by a fixed constant.
We study the asymptotic behavior of the diameter of this set equipped
with the Teichmuller metric and prove that it grows like log(g). This
is joint with Kasra Rafi.
March 3, 2010William Malone, University of Utah Quasi-isometric Classification of Geometric Amalgamations of Free GroupsIn order to understand the large scale geometry of limit groups a good starting place is with geometric amalgamations of free groups (a class of graphs of groups) since they are virtually limit groups. In this talk a complete quasi-isometric invariant for geometric amalgamations of free groups will be given, along with an elementary example showing that commensurability and quasi-isometry are not the same equivalence relation for virtual limit groups.
March 5, 2010John Parker, Durham Special Day, Friday, 12:55-1:55 in LCB 222Constructing non-arithmetic latticesThe first examples of non-arithmetic complex hyperbolic lattices
were given by Mostow in 1980. These examples are generalised triangle
groups generated by complex reflections of orders 3, 4 or 5.
I will discuss how to parametrise such triangle groups and how to
identify which of them may possibly be lattices. Most of these
candidates are non-arithmetic. I will then survey an ongoing project
with Deraux and Paupert whose goal is to use this idea to construct
(families of) new non-arithmetic complex hyperbolic lattices.
March 10, 2010David Futer, Temple University Bourdon's building and hyperbolic surfacesBourdon's building is a negatively curved 2-complex built out of hyperbolic right-angled polygons. Its automorphism group is large (uncountable) and remarkably rich. We study, and mostly answer, the question of when there is a discrete subgroup of the automorphism group such that the quotient is a closed surface of genus g. This involves some fun elementary combinatorics, but quickly leads to open questions in group theory and number theory. This is joint work with Anne Thomas.
March 17, 2010Anne Thomas, University of Oxford Lattices in complete Kac-Moody groupsA complete Kac-Moody group over a finite field is a totally disconnected, locally compact group, which may be thought of as an "infinite-dimensional Lie group". We study cocompact lattices in such groups of rank 2, where the associated building is a tree, using the group action on the tree and finite group theory. This is joint work with Inna (Korchagina) Capdeboscq.
March 24, 2010 Spring BreakApril 14, 2010Tim Riley, Cornell Hydra GroupsI will describe some wild geometry that arises in an apparently benign group theoretic setting: I will exhibit a family of groups enjoying a number of restrictive geometric and algebraic conditions (they are CAT(0), bi-automatic, 1-relator, and free-by-cyclic), and yet these groups have free subgroups of huge (Ackermannian) distortion. The origin of this behaviour lies in a simple computational game --- a realisation of Hercules' battle with the hydra, played out in manipulations of strings of letters. This is work with Will Dison.
May 5, 2010Erika Meucci, University of Utah Special time 10:00Relative Outer Automorphisms of Free GroupsIn this talk I will describe a (contractible) relative outer space on
which the group of relative outer automorphisms of a free group acts
properly and discontinuously.
September 8, 2010Christopher Cashen, University of Utah Splitting Line Patterns in Free GroupsI will talk about splitting a free group relative to a line pattern.
September 15, 2010 No talkSeptember 22, 2010Domingo Toledo, University of Utah Cubic surfaces and representations of SL(2)It is a classical fact, going back to Fricke and Klein, that the relative representation variety of the fundamental group of the quadruply punctured sphere with fixed traces A, B. C. D at the punctures is an affine cubic surface. Since cubic surfaces depend on 4 parameters it is natural question, observed by several authors, whether every cubic surface can be obtained this way. The purpose of this talk is to present a proof of this fact. This is joint work with Bill Goldman.
October 13, 2010 No talk, Fall BreakOctober 20, 2010Nat Smale, University of Utah Cohomology and Hodge Theory at a Fixed Scale for Metric SpacesFor a compact metric space (even as simple as a finite set of
points in Euclidean space) there may appear to be nontrivial homology
classes at certain fixed scales. I will discuss some recent results on the
development of a cohomology theory at a fixed scale for compact metric
spaces carrying a Borel measure. For metric spaces that satisfy certain
conditions, a corresponding Hodge theory holds. In the special case of
Riemannian manifolds at small scales, the corresponding spaces of harmonic
functions are isomorphic to the classical ones (and thus the DeRham
cohomology).
November 24, 2010 No talk, Thanksgiving BreakJanuary 31, 2011Juan Souto, University of Michigan Monday in LCB 222Homomorphisms between mapping class groupsSuppose that \(X\) and \(Y\) are surfaces of finite topological
type with genus \(g_X\geq 6\) and \(g_Y\leq 2g_X-1\). We describe all
homomorphisms \(Map(X)\to Map(Y)\) between the associated mapping class
groups. As a consequence we prove that, if \(X\) and \(Y\) have finite
analytic type as Riemann surfaces, every non-constant holomorphic map
\(M(X)\to M(Y)\) between the corresponding moduli spaces is a forgetful
map. This is join work with Javier Aramayona.
February 9, 2011Richard Hain, Duke University Topology and ArithmeticFebruary 16, 2011Tom Church, University of Chicago Representation theory and homological stabilityHomological stability is a remarkable phenomenon where for certain
sequences \(X_n\) of groups or spaces -- for example \(\mathrm{SL}(n,Z)\), the braid
group \(B_n\), or the moduli space \(M_n\) of genus \(n\) curves -- it turns out
that the homology groups \(H_i(X_n)\) do not depend on \(n\) once \(n\) is large
enough. But for many natural analogous sequences, from pure braid
groups to congruence groups to Torelli groups, homological stability
fails horribly. In these cases the rank of \(H_i(X_n)\) blows up to
infinity, and in the latter two cases almost nothing is known about
\(H_i(X_n)\); indeed it's possible there is no nice "closed form" for the
answers.
While doing some homology computations for the Torelli group, we found
what looked like the shadow of an overarching pattern. In order to
explain it and to formulate a specific conjecture, we came up with the
notion of "representation stability" for a sequence of representations
of groups. This makes it possible to meaningfully talk about "the
stable homology of the pure braid group" or "the stable homology of
the Torelli group" even though the homology never stabilizes. This
work is joint with Benson Farb.
In this talk I will explain our broad picture and give two major
applications. One is a surprisingly strong connection between
representation stability for certain configuration spaces and
arithmetic statistics for varieties over finite fields, joint with
Jordan Ellenberg and Benson Farb. The other is representation
stability for the homology of the configuration space of \(n\) distinct
points on a manifold \(M\).
February 25, 2011Anna Lenzhen, University of Rennes 1 Friday in LCB 222TBAMarch 9, 2011Ruth Charney, Brandeis University Divergence in right-angled Artin groupsThe divergence, \(div(\alpha,r)\), of a geodesic \(\alpha\)
measures the length of the shortest path
between two points on \(\alpha\) that stays outside the ball of radius
\(r\) about their midpoint. We give a group
theoretic criterion for determining when a geodesic in a right-angled
Artin group \(G\) has super-linear divergence
and show that this divergence is at most quadratic. We use this to
describe the structure of the asymptotic cone
of \(G\) and to get a new proof that every non-abelian subgroup of \(G\)
has an infinite dimensional space of
quasimorphisms. (Joint work with Jason Behrstock.)
April 18, 2011Anne Thomas, University of Sydney Monday in LCB 222Infinite generation of non-cocompact lattices on right-angled buildingsLet \(\Gamma\) be a non-cocompact lattice on a right-angled building \(X\).
Examples of such \(X\) include products of trees, or Bourdon's building
\(I_{p,q}\), which has apartments hyperbolic planes tesselated by
right-angled \(p\)-gons and all vertex links the complete bipartite graph
\(K_{q,q}\). We prove that if \(\Gamma\) has a strict fundamental domain then
\(\Gamma\) is not finitely generated. The proof uses a topological
criterion for finite generation and the separation properties of
subcomplexes of \(X\) called tree-walls. This is joint work with Kevin
Wortman.
April 27, 2011Mladen Bestvina, University of Utah On the complex of free factorsI will give an outline of a proof of the theorem of
Masur-Minsky that the curve complex is hyperbolic. The set of
nontrivial free factors, up to conjugacy, of a free group of rank n
forms the set of vertices of the complex of free factors. I will then
discuss hyperbolicity of this complex.