Tuesday, November 12 |
07:00 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Vistas Dining Room) |
09:00 - 10:00 |
Charles Doran: Gluing Periods for DHT Mirrors ↓ Let X be a Calabi–Yau manifold that admits a Tyurin degeneration to a union of two quasi-Fano varieties X1 and X2 intersecting along a smooth anticanonical divisor D. The “DHT mirror symmetry conjecture” implies that the Landau–Ginzburg mirrors of (X1,D) and (X2,D) can be glued to obtain the mirror of X. Initial motivation came from considering the bounded derived categories of X, X1, and X2 and symplectomorphisms on the Landau-Ginzburg models mirror to (X1,D) and (X2,D). In this talk, flipping the roles of the two categories, I will explain how periods on the Landau-Ginzburg mirrors of (X1,D) and (X2,D) are related to periods on the mirror of X. The relation among periods relates different Gromov-Witten invariants via their respective mirror maps. This is joint work with Fenglong You and Jordan Kostiuk. (TCPL 201) |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:30 - 11:30 |
Humberto Diaz: Unramified cohomology and the integral Hodge conjecture ↓ The failure of the integral Hodge conjecture has been known since the famous counterexamples of Atiyah and Hirzebruch. Currently, several methods exist for producing other counterexamples. For instance, a seminal result of Colliot-Thélène and Voisin relates the failure of the integral Hodge conjecture in degree 4 to degree 3 unramified cohomology. After giving a quick overview of this method, I will discuss how it can be used to obtain new counterexamples to the integral Hodge conjecture. (TCPL 201) |
11:30 - 13:30 |
Lunch (Vistas Dining Room) |
14:00 - 15:00 |
Stephen Scully: On an extension of the separation theorem for quadratic forms over fields ↓ The problem of determining conditions under which a rational map can exist between a pair of twisted flag varieties plays an important role in the study of algebraic groups and their torsors over general fields. A non-trivial special case arising in the theory of quadratic forms amounts to studying the extent to which an anisotropic quadratic form can become isotropic after extension to the function field of a quadric. To this end, let p and q be anisotropic quadratic forms over an arbitrary field, and let k be the dimension of the anisotropic part of q over the function field of the quadric p=0. We then conjecture that the dimension of q lies within k of an integer multiple of 2s+1, where 2s+1 is the least power of 2 bounding the dimension of p from above. This generalizes the so-called ``separation theorem'' of D. Hoffmann, bridging the gap between it and some other classical results on Witt kernels of function fields of quadrics. The statement holds trivially if k≥2s−1. In this talk, I will discuss recent work that confirms its validity in the case where k≤2s−1+2s−2 (among other cases). (TCPL 201) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
15:30 - 16:30 |
Patrick McFaddin: Twisted forms of toric varieties, their derived categories, and their rationality ↓ Toric varieties defined over the complex numbers provide an important testing ground for computing various algebro-geometric invariants (e.g., the coherent derived category associated to a variety), as many computations of interest may be phrased entirely in terms of combinatorial data such as fans, cones, polytopes. Over general fields, we consider twisted forms of such objects called "arithmetic toric varieties", whose analysis is naturally Galois-theoretic. In this talk, we will present results on the structure of derived categories of arithmetic toric varieties via exceptional collections. In particular, we will focus on some highly symmetric classes of such objects, including centrally symmetric toric Fano varieties and toric varieties associated to root systems of type A. The latter class yields examples of varieties which are arithmetically interesting but whose derived categories are well understood. A conjecture of Orlov posits that the structure of the derived category influences the rationality type of a variety. We will discuss how this plays out in the setting of toric varieties. This is joint work with Matthew Ballard, Alexander Duncan, and Alicia Lamarche. (TCPL 201) |
16:30 - 17:30 |
Matthew Ballard: From flips to functors ↓ A healthy body of evidence says that birational geometry and derived categories are intimately bound. Even so, many basic questions are still open. One of the most central questions is the conjecture of Bondal and Orlov (later extended by Kawamata) that says two smooth projective varieties related by a flop are actually derived equivalent. The first step in resolving this question is understanding how to produce functors from rational maps. In work with Diemer and Favero, we provided a method to construct an integral kernel associated to any D-flip of normal varieties with Q-Cartier D. Conjecturally, this can be used to answer Bondal and Orlov's question. In this talk, we will discuss the construction and natural extensions of it. In particular, we will highlight work with Chidambaram, Favero, McFaddin, and Vandermolen relating to the what has been termed a Grassmann flop. (TCPL 201) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner (Vistas Dining Room) |