Geometry, Symmetry and Physics [3] | Quantum Category O and Categorification of Periodic Hecke Module, Lecture 2 |
4:00pm to 6:00pm -
KT 801
|
The BGG category O plays an important role in the study of representations of semisimple Lie algebras. Its connection to the Hecke category is a starting point of Geometric Representation Theory. In this lecture, I will introduce a version of category O for quantum groups at roots of unity. I will explain a derived equivalence from (the principal block of) quantum category O to the affine Hecke category. Under the equivalence, the highest weight structure of quantum category O provides a categorification of the “periodic Hecke module”. I will continue in the second lecture by giving basic properties of quantum category O. Then I will introduce the affine Hecke algebra and the periodic Hecke module, and explain a categorification of the former using coherent sheaves on Steinberg variety. |
Hahn Lecture Series [4] | Approximate groups and uniform spectral gaps |
4:00pm -
KT207
|
This lecture will be devoted to growth and expansion in finite and infinite Cayley graphs. The expander property, which is essential in many aspects of theoretical computer science, also has applications to analytic number theory. In the 2010s new combinatorial methods pioneered by Bourgain and Tao among others and based on the notion of approximate group have helped establish spectral gaps and the expander property for many Cayley graphs. I will present the state of the art on these questions and describe recent work in which Littlewood-Offord theorems for non-abelian random walks and diophantine dynamics play a role in establishing uniform spectral gaps in arbitrary linear groups. |
Hahn Lecture Series [4] | Bernoulli convolutions and random polynomials |
4:00pm -
KT 101
|
Bernoulli convolutions are distributions on the real line obtained as power series ∑n>0±λn with random signs. They are basic examples of self-similar measures. Determining for which value of the parameter λ is the resulting measure absolutely continuous is an open problem with a long history going back to Erd\H{o}s. New methods, blending entropy theory and Diophantine analysis have been used in recent years to tackle it and make new advances to neighboring problems such as the study of random polynomials of large degree. The lecture will give an overview of these developments. |
Hahn Lecture Series [4] | Character varieties of random groups. |
4:00pm -
KT207
|
In this third lecture, I will talk about random groups and their linear representations. Introduced by Gromov in the 80s, random groups provide a wealth of examples of finitely presented groups. With O. Becker and P. Varju, we have undertaken the study of their character variety, that is the moduli space of their representations with values in SL(2,C) or a more general semisimple algebraic group. I will show how new families of Zariski-dense rigid groups arise this way and what it tells us about the geometry of word maps. The method showcases a delicate interplay between characteristic zero and characteristic p and relies on GRH. |
Quantum Topology and Field Theory [5] | On the structure of skein modules |
5:15pm -
KT 801
|
Skein modules were introduced by Józef H. Przytycki as generalisations of the Jones and HOMFLYPT polynomial link invariants in the 3-sphere to arbitrary 3-manifolds. The Kauffman bracket skein module (KBSM) is the most extensively studied of all. However, computing the KBSM of a 3-manifold is known to be notoriously hard, especially over the ring of Laurent polynomials. With the goal of finding a definite structure of the KBSM over this ring, several conjectures and theorems were stated over the years for KBSMs. We show that some of these conjectures, and even theorems, are not true. In this talk I will briefly discuss a counterexample to Marche’s generalisation of Witten’s conjecture. I will show that a theorem stated by Przytycki in 1999 about the KBSM of the connected sum of two handlebodies does not hold. I will also give the exact structure of the KBSM of the connected sum of two solid tori and show that it is isomorphic to the KBSM of a genus two handlebody modulo some specific handle sliding relations. Moreover, these handle sliding relations can be written in terms of Chebyshev polynomials. |
Friday Morning Seminar [6] | Multinomial percolation |
10:00am -
KT 801
|
We look at bond percolation on “graph blowups” of a graph G. This is a generalization of the Erdos-Renyi random graph, and it features an analogous phase transition with respect to the appearance of a giant component. We show that the vector multiplicities of the giant component converge (after suitably centering and rescaling) to a Gaussian field on G whose covariance can be computed explicitly as the square of a massive Green’s function on G. The proof strategy is combinatorial and relies on the combinatorics of spanning trees on blowup graphs, whose generating function has a beautiful analytic structure. |
Geometry, Symmetry and Physics [3] | Quantum Category O and Categorification of Periodic Hecke Module, Lecture 3 | 4:00pm to 6:00pm - |
The BGG category O plays an important role in the study of representations of semisimple Lie algebras. Its connection to the Hecke category is a starting point of Geometric Representation Theory. In this lecture, I will introduce a version of category O for quantum groups at roots of unity. I will explain a derived equivalence from (the principal block of) quantum category O to the affine Hecke category. Under the equivalence, the highest weight structure of quantum category O provides a categorification of the “periodic Hecke module”. In the third lecture, I will introduce the main result on an equivalence between quantum category O and affine Hecke category. Then I will explain the corresponding t-structure on the affine Hecke category, and its relation to the periodic Hecke module. |
Links
[1] https://math.yale.edu/list/calendar/grid/week/abstract/2025-W13
[2] https://math.yale.edu/list/calendar/grid/week/abstract/2025-W15
[3] https://math.yale.edu/seminars/geometry-symmetry-and-physics
[4] https://math.yale.edu/seminars/hahn-lecture-series
[5] https://math.yale.edu/seminars/quantum-topology-and-field-theory
[6] https://math.yale.edu/seminars/friday-morning-seminar