Format results
On the acylindricity of the outer automorphism group of non-solvable Baumslag-Solitar groups
Bratati SomICTS:29131Perimeter Presents - CBC Ideas: Nahlah Ayed in conversation with Claudia de Rham
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Claudia de Rham Imperial College London
- Nahlah Ayed
PIRSA:24080001-
Coxeter groups are biautomatic - 3
Piotr Przytycki (McGill, Canada) & Damian Osajda (UCPH, Denmark)ICTS:29113
Drilled hyperbolic surface bundles over graphs are CAT(0) cubulable
Biswajit NagICTS:29126By works of Agol, Bergeron–Wise, Dufour, and Kahn–Markovic, among others, it is known that fundamental groups of fibred hyperbolic 3-manifolds (and those of closed hyperbolic 3-manifolds in general) act geometrically on CAT(0) cube complexes and thus these manifolds possess strong group theoretic and topological properties. However, it is unknown if these results extend to the fundamental groups of all hyperbolic surface bundles over finite graphs (in other words, arbitrary hyperbolic surface-by-free groups). In this talk, we will describe how, after modifying these bundles by drilling (that is, removing small tubular neighbourhoods of) enough simple closed curves in specific fibres, the corresponding fundamental groups become hyperbolic relative to the introduced tori subgroups, and as a consequence, act geometrically on CAT(0) cube complexes. This is joint work with Mahan Mj.
On the geometry of extensions of free groups
Pritam GhoshICTS:29128Let F be a finite-rank free group with rank greater than 2, Q be a finitely generated subgroup of the outer automorphism group of F, and consider a short exact sequence
1 → F → EQ → Q → 1.
My talk will discuss some known results and some open questions regarding the geometry of EQ, given information about Q. There is a somewhat decent understanding of the geometry of EQ when Q is cyclic, where we have necessary and sufficient conditions on Q to determine if EQ is hyperbolic or relatively hyperbolic or thick. One key idea we will look into is – why EQ is relatively hyperbolic when Q is an infinite cyclic group generated by an exponentially growing outer automorphism of F and then discuss some difficulties one faces while extending such results to the cases when Q is not cyclic.On the acylindricity of the outer automorphism group of non-solvable Baumslag-Solitar groups
Bratati SomICTS:29131A group G is called acylindrically hyperbolic if it admits a non-elementary acylindrical action on a hyperbolic space. It includes many examples of interest, e.g., nonelementary hyperbolic and relatively hyperbolic groups, all but finitely many mapping class groups of punctured closed surfaces, most 3-manifold groups and Out(Fn) for n > 1. Although BS(p, q) is essentially never acylindrically hyperbolic we will see in this talk that Out(BS(p, q)) is acylindrically hyperbolic for non-solvable Baumslag-Solitar groups, and explore further properties of the group using its acylindricity. This is joint work with Daxun Wang.
Growth of (sub)groups with hyperbolicity - 3
Inhyeok ChoiICTS:29111In geometric group theory, a group is studied via its action on some metric spaces, often with unbounded orbit. It is then natural to investigate the growth of orbit points, group elements, and conjugacy classes. Furthermore, the pioneering works of Patterson and Sullivan and subsequent development connected this growth problem with the dynamics on the boundary and the geodesic flow on the space. In this mini-course, we will study the growth problem in hyperbolic groups and CAT(0) groups via a combinatorial approach. The flexible nature of our approach allows many generalizations.
In week 2, we will compute the growth rate of certain subsets/subgroups of the ambient group. For example, refer to the following articles:
1. I. Gekhtman and W. Yang, Counting conjugacy classes in groups with contracting elements. (2022)
2. V. Erlandsson and J. Souto, Counting geodesics of given commutator length. (2023)Basic references:
Introduction to hyperbolic groups, by Davide Spriano h...
Property(T), median spaces and CAT(0) cubical complexes - 3
Indira ChatterjiICTS:29109I will give the basics on property(T), and explain the characterization in terms of actions on median spaces. I will discuss CAT(0) cubical complexes as examples of median spaces, and discuss groups acting on those objects as having a strong negation of property(T).
Possible problems for 2nd week:Read ‘Spectral interpretations of property(T)’ by Yann Ollivier, with a generalization in mind. http://www.yann-ollivier.org/rech/publs/aut_spec_T.pdf
Study the orbits of the action of discrete cocompact subgroup P in SL^(2,R) on a median space (viewing P as a subgroup of the mapping class group of a surface prevents a proper action on a CAT(0) space). This will involve reading ‘Geometries of 3-manifolds’ by Peter Scott https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/135276/blms0401....Pre-requisites: Bridson-Haefliger Part I, Part II Sections 1, 2 (ideally also 6,8,10), Part III H
Perimeter Presents - CBC Ideas: Nahlah Ayed in conversation with Claudia de Rham
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Claudia de Rham Imperial College London
- Nahlah Ayed
PIRSA:24080001About the Event:
Perimeter Presents
About the Speaker:
Most people have a basic understanding of gravity as the fundamental force that keeps us tethered to the Earth. They've likely even heard the fabled story of Isaac Newton’s inspiration for the theory: an apple falling from a tree. But few people have spent as much time grappling with gravity as Claudia de Rham, Professor of Theoretical Physics at Imperial College London.
In her recently released book, The Beauty of Falling: A Life in Pursuit of Gravity, de Rham recounts not only her scientific investigations of gravity and the limits of Einstein’s general theory of relativity, but also her more practical encounters with gravity – as a diver, a pilot, and an astronaut candidate.
Many of de Rham’s ponderous flights took place in Waterloo Region, where she earned her pilot’s license during a postdoctoral fellowship at Perimeter from 2006 to 2009. She has remained connected to Perimeter over the years, including as a Visiting Fellow since 2018.
About the Event:
On Thursday, August 1 at 7:00 PM EDT, Perimeter presents a short talk with de Rham about her fascinating journey in pursuit of gravity’s true nature, followed by an in-depth conversation with Nahlah Ayed, host of CBC’s Ideas, and an audience Q&A.
Tickets:
Registration to attend this in-person event will be available on Monday, July 22 at 9:00 AM EDT.
This event will not be livestreamed, but made available in the subsequent days on Perimeter’s YouTube channel. An edited version will also appear on CBC’s Ideas in the fall.
Tickets for this event are 100% free.
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Coxeter groups are biautomatic - 3
Piotr Przytycki (McGill, Canada) & Damian Osajda (UCPH, Denmark)ICTS:29113In 1993 Brink and Howlett proved that the Davis-Shapiro (regular) language provides an automatic structure for Coxeter groups. This means that appropriate paths in the Cayley graph fellow travel, and allows to effectively solve the Word Problem. Similarly, having a bi-automatic structure allows to solve the Conjugacy Problem. However, the Davis-Shapiro language fails to be bi-automatic, even though the Conjugacy Problem for Coxeter groups has been solved by Krammer.
Other languages have been studied over the years, but only recently we came across one (that we call ‘voracious’) giving the bi-automaticity of Coxeter groups. In this minicourse we will explain the proof of our theorem. It involves the Parallel Wall Theorem of Brink and Howlett, the CAT(0) geometry of the Davis complex, and the bipodality of Dyer and Hohlweg.
Pre-requisites: Before the minicourse, please read Sections 1.1, 2.1, and 2.2 of the book ‘Lectures on buildings’ by Ronan.