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Geometry and Topology Seminar

We meet Thursdays at 2:45–3:45 pm in Whitney Hall 100E. This semester's organizers are James Hyde and Lorenzo Ruffoni. The seminar has an announcement mailing list open to all.

Topics include: geometric group theory, differential geometry and topology, low-dimensional topology, algebraic topology, and homotopy theory.

Fall 2025

  • August 28th
    Speaker: Cary Malkiewich (Binghamton)
    Title: Higher scissors congruence

    Abstract: Scissors congruence is the study of polytopes, up to the relation of cutting into finitely many pieces and rearranging the pieces. In the 2010s, Zakharevich defined a “higher” version of scissors congruence, where we don't just ask whether two polytopes are scissors congruent, but also how many scissors congruences there are from one polytope to another.

    Zakharevich's definition is a form of algebraic K-theory, which is famously difficult to compute, but I describe some recent work that makes these calculations possible, at least for low-dimensional geometries. This allows us to compute the homology of the group of cut-and-paste operations in new cases, including the group of interval exchange transformations, and a new proof of Szymik and Wahl's theorem that Thompson's group V is acyclic.

    Much of this talk is based on joint work with Anna-Marie Bohmann, Teena Gerhardt, Mona Merling, and Inna Zakharevich, and also with Alexander Kupers, Ezekiel Lemann, Jeremy Miller, and Robin Sroka.

  • September 4th
    Speaker: Liz Tatum (Rochester)
    Title: Some applications of equivariant Brown-Gitler spectra

    Abstract: In the 1980s, Mahowald and Kane used integral Brown-Gitler spectra to construct splittings of the cooperations algebras for ko, connective real k-theory, and ku, connective complex k-theory. These splittings helped make it feasible to do computations using the ko- and ku-based Adams spectral sequences.

    These spectral sequences have proven to be powerful tools for better understanding the structure of the stable homotopy groups of the sphere, with a variety of interesting applications. For example, Mahowald used them to verify the Telescope Conjecture at height one, and Gonzalez later used them to classify stunted lens spaces. In this talk, I will discuss progress towards developing analogues of these tools in the C_2 equivariant setting. In particular, Guchuan Li, Sarah Petersen, and I have constructed models for C_2-equivariant analogues of the integral Brown-Gitler spectra, and used them to construct an analogue of the ku-splitting.

  • September 18th
    Speaker: Lorenzo Ruffoni (Binghamton)
    Title: A Pontryagin sphere at infinity in real hyperbolic space

    Abstract: Given a discrete group of isometries of hyperbolic space, we can look at its limit set, i.e., the set of accumulation points of its orbits on the sphere at infinity. This is a compact metric space embedded in the sphere at infinity, and it often displays interesting geometric and topological features that can reveal algebraic information about the group itself. In this talk, first we will discuss the general theory and present classical examples of limit sets, including some simple fractals (Cantor set, Sierpinski carpet). Then, we will present the construction of groups whose limit set is a Pontryagin sphere. These groups are obtained as reflection groups, and the construction is based on the existence of certain right-angled hyperbolic polyhedra. This is joint work with S. Douba, G.-S. Lee, and L. Marquis.

  • October 2nd
    No seminar
  • October 9th
    Speaker: Liam Keenan (Brown)
    Title: On products of skeleta

    Abstract: Given simplicial complexes, X and Y, a classical result of Eilenberg and Zilber tells us that the complex of integral chains on the product, X x Y, is quasi-isomorphic to the tensor product of complexes associated to X and Y. Their result relies on the basic observation that the product of an n-simplex with an m-simplex, can be built by gluing together simplices of dimension (n+m). Remarkably, this basic observation has much farther reaching-consequences than one might expect. In joint work with Maximilien Peroux, we showed that whenever you have two objects, X and Y, built up out of simplicies, the skeletal filtrations of X and Y can always be related to the skeletal filtration of X x Y, in an entirely canonical fashion. I will introduce this circle of ideas, explain my work with Peroux, and discuss its relation with the Dold-Kan correspondence.

  • October 16th
    Speaker: John Abou-Rached (Binghamton)
    Title: Integral models for non-Shimura curves and the Eichler-Shimura congruence relation

    Abstract: We construct integral models for an infinite family of algebraic curves that includes noncongruence modular curves, as well as curves whose uniformizers are non-arithmetic Fuchsian groups. Most of these curves are not Shimura curves. We affirm a conjecture of Mukamel that the set of primes of good reduction of such curves have arithmetic significance and obtain an explicit description of this set. We conjecture that a version of Deligne-Rapoport's study of the reduction of modular curves holds in this context, and conjecture that a version of the Eichler-Shimura congruence relation holds in this setting, in resonance with Shimura curves.

  • October 23th
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  • October 30th
    Speaker: Tam Cheetham-West (Yale)
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  • November 6th
    Speaker: Genevieve Walsh (Tufts)
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  • November 13th
    Speaker: Maximilien Peroux (Michigan State University)
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  • November 20th
    Speaker: David Chan (Michigan State University)
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  • November 27th
    No seminar
  • December 4th
    Speaker: Hongbin Sun (Rutgers)
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seminars/topsem.1759763773.txt · Last modified: 2025/10/06 11:16 by malkiewich