Tuesday, August 8 |
07:00 - 08:45 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
09:00 - 10:00 |
Eric Larson: Interpolation for Brill--Noether Curves ↓ In this talk, we determine when there is a Brill--Noether curve of given degree and given genus that passes through a given number of general points in any projective space. (TCPL 201) |
10:00 - 10:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:30 - 11:30 |
Jonathan Wise: Moduli of linear series ↓ I will describe an extension to nodal curves of the space of linear series on smooth curves. This is work in progress with Luca Battistella and Francesca Carocci. (TCPL 201) |
11:30 - 13:00 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
13:00 - 13:15 |
Shiyue Li: Multimatroids and moduli spaces of rational curves with cyclic action ↓ I will describe moduli spaces of rational stable curves with finite cyclic action. The intersection theory of these moduli spaces is governed by the combinatorics of multimatroids. These multimatroids, introduced by Bouchet, generalize matroids, delta-matroids, and matroidal structures appearing in ribbon graphs. The geometry of these moduli spaces in turn inform us about statements of multimatroids. Based on past and present joint works with Emily Clader, Chiara Damiolini, Christopher Eur, Daoji Huang, Rohini Ramadas. (TCPL 201) |
13:20 - 13:50 |
Siddarth Kannan: Hodge--Deligne polynomials of heavy/light moduli spaces and quasimaps ↓ I will discuss recent work, joint with Stefano Serpente and Claudia Yun, on the permutation group representations determined by the rational cohomology of moduli spaces of weighted stable curves with heavy/light weight data. Time permitting, I will discuss applications of our formula to moduli spaces of quasimaps to projective space, in ongoing joint work with Terry Song. (TCPL 201) |
14:00 - 15:00 |
Navid Nabijou: Roots and logs in the enumerative forest ↓ Logarithmic and orbifold structures provide two independent ways to model curves in a variety tangent to a divisor. Simple examples demonstrate that the moduli spaces and associated enumerative invariants differ, but a more structural explanation of this defect has remained elusive.
We identify "birational invariance" as the key property distinguishing the two theories. The logarithmic theory is stable under blowups of the target variety, while the orbifold theory is not. By identifying a suitable system of blowups, we define a “limit" orbifold theory and prove that it coincides with the logarithmic theory. The correct system of blowups is describes in terms of tropical curves.
No prior knowledge of Gromov-Witten theory will be assumed. This is joint work with Luca Battistella and Dhruv Ranganathan. (TCPL 201) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
16:00 - 17:00 |
Gavril Farkas: The birational geometry of M_g: new developments via non-abelian Brill-Noether theory and tropical geometry ↓ I will discuss how novel ideas from non-abelian Brill-Noether theory and from the theory of resonance varieties can be used to prove that the moduli space of Prym varieties of genus 13 is of general type (and that the moduli space of curves of genus 16 is uniruled). For the much studied question of determining the Kodaira dimension of moduli spaces, both these cases were long understood to be crucial in order to make further progress. I will briefly indicate the use of tropical geometry in order to establish an essential case of the Strong Maximal Rank Conjecture, necessary to carry out this program. Joint work with Jensen and Payne (respectively Verra). (TCPL 201) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in Vistas Dining Room, top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
20:00 - 20:30 |
Patrick Kennedy-Hunt: The logarithmic Hilbert scheme and its tropicalisation. ↓ A basic question is understanding how the Hilbert/ Quot scheme of a projective variety X changes when we degenerate X. The key to answering this question is to study the geometry of a pair (X,D) with D a divisor on X. I will discuss compact moduli spaces called the logarithmic Hilbert/ Quot schemes which track this transverse geometry. The tropical version of a Hilbert scheme plays an important role in this story. (TCPL 201) |
20:30 - 21:00 |
Alheydis Geiger: Self-dual matroids from canonical curves ↓ A hyperplane section of a canonically embedded, non-hypereliptic smooth curve of genus g consists of 2g-2 points in g-2 dimensional projective space. From work by Dolgachev and Ortland it is known that point configurations obtained in such a way are self-associated. We interpret this notion in terms of matroids: A generic hyperplane section of a canonical curve gives rise to an identically self-dual matroid. This can also be seen as a combinatorial shadow of the Riemann-Roch theorem. We compute these sets of matroids up to rank 5. Building on works by Bath, Mukai and Petrakiev, we investigate the question, which self-dual point configurations can be obtained by a hyperplane section of a canonical curve. Self-dual point configurations are parametrized by a subvariety of the Grassmannian Gr(n,2n) and its tropicalization. This is well understood for n=3, while n=4 provides more challenges. This project is joined work with Sachi Hashimoto, Bernd Sturmfels and Raluca Vlad. (TCPL 201) |