Tuesday, June 18 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant at your assigned hotel) |
09:30 - 10:30 |
Hyungryul Baik: Topology, Geometry, and Dynamics of Laminar groups ↓ A notion of laminar groups was introduced by D. Calegari. A group acting on the circle by orientation-preserving homeomorphisms is called a laminar group if it admits an invariant lamination. Abundant examples arise naturally in the study of low-dimensional topology and geometric group theory. We will discuss how topology, geometry, and dynamics interplay when we study laminar groups. Some old and new results will be discussed as examples. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 12:00 |
Thomas Koberda (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:10 - 13:30 |
Sang-Hyun Kim: RAAGs in Diff(S^1) ↓ Let Diffr(S1) denote the group of orientation-preserving Cr diffeomorphisms on the circle. We prove that a right-angled Artin group G embeds into Diff2(S1) if and only if G does not contain (F2xZ)∗Z. This extends a previous joint work with Baik and Koberda, and answers a question of Kharlamov. (joint work with Koberda) (Conference Room San Felipe) |
13:30 - 15:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
15:00 - 16:00 |
Tyrone Ghaswala: Promoting circular-orderability to left-orderability ↓ I will present a new characterisation for a circularly-orderable group to be left-orderable, and introduce the obstruction spectrum of a circularly-orderable group. This raises a plethora of intriguing questions.
This is joint work with Jason Bell and Adam Clay. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:30 - 17:00 |
Tetsuya Ito: Generalized torsion in 3-manifold groups and normal closures of slope elements ↓ If a 3-manifold group does not admit a bi-ordering, then we may expect that it has a generalized torsion element. As a particular case, the fundamental group of any 3-manifold obtained by non zero surgery on a knot in the 3-sphere may have such an element. Then there are two situations: (1) a generalized torsion element in a knot group becomes a generalized torsion element in the surgered 3-manifold, or (2) a generalized torsion element arises via the Dehn filling. The first situation leads us to study of normal closures of slope elements in a knot group.
In the first talk we investigate relationships among such normal subgroups. In particular, we establish the peripheral Magnus property.
In the second talk we focus on generalized torsion elements in Dehn surgered manifolds arisen from the first or the second situations. We also take a closer look at some explicit examples.
In the third talk we prove that any generalized torsion element in a free product of torsion-free groups is conjugate to a generalized torsion element in some factor group. This implies that the fundamental group of a compact orientable 3-manifold M has a generalized torsion element if and only if the fundamental group of some prime factor of M has a generalized torsion element. On the other hand, we demonstrate that there are infinitely many toroidal 3-manifolds whose fundamental group has a generalized torsion element, while the fundamental group of each decomposing piece has no such elements. Additionally, in the course of the proof of the former result, we give an upper bound for the stable commutator length of generalized torsion elements. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:00 - 17:30 |
Kimihiko Motegi: Generalized torsion in 3-manifold groups and normal closures of slope elements ↓ If a 3-manifold group does not admit a bi-ordering, then we may expect that it has a generalized torsion element. As a particular case, the fundamental group of any 3-manifold obtained by non zero surgery on a knot in the 3-sphere may have such an element. Then there are two situations: (1) a generalized torsion element in a knot group becomes a generalized torsion element in the surgered 3-manifold, or (2) a generalized torsion element arises via the Dehn filling. The first situation leads us to study of normal closures of slope elements in a knot group.
In the first talk we investigate relationships among such normal subgroups. In particular, we establish the peripheral Magnus property.
In the second talk we focus on generalized torsion elements in Dehn surgered manifolds arisen from the first or the second situations. We also take a closer look at some explicit examples.
In the third talk we prove that any generalized torsion element in a free product of torsion-free groups is conjugate to a generalized torsion element in some factor group. This implies that the fundamental group of a compact orientable 3-manifold M has a generalized torsion element if and only if the fundamental group of some prime factor of M has a generalized torsion element. On the other hand, we demonstrate that there are infinitely many toroidal 3-manifolds whose fundamental group has a generalized torsion element, while the fundamental group of each decomposing piece has no such elements. Additionally, in the course of the proof of the former result, we give an upper bound for the stable commutator length of generalized torsion elements. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:30 - 18:00 |
Masakazu Teragaito: Generalized torsion and Dehn filling ↓ If a 3-manifold group does not admit a bi-ordering, then we may expect that it has a generalized torsion element. As a particular case, the fundamental group of any 3-manifold obtained by non zero surgery on a knot in the 3-sphere may have such an element. Then there are two situations: (1) a generalized torsion element in a knot group becomes a generalized torsion element in the surgered 3-manifold, or (2) a generalized torsion element arises via the Dehn filling. The first situation leads us to study of normal closures of slope elements in a knot group.
In the first talk we investigate relationships among such normal subgroups. In particular, we establish the peripheral Magnus property.
In the second talk we focus on generalized torsion elements in Dehn surgered manifolds arisen from the first or the second situations. We also take a closer look at some explicit examples.
In the third talk we prove that any generalized torsion element in a free product of torsion-free groups is conjugate to a generalized torsion element in some factor group. This implies that the fundamental group of a compact orientable 3-manifold M has a generalized torsion element if and only if the fundamental group of some prime factor of M has a generalized torsion element. On the other hand, we demonstrate that there are infinitely many toroidal 3-manifolds whose fundamental group has a generalized torsion element, while the fundamental group of each decomposing piece has no such elements. Additionally, in the course of the proof of the former result, we give an upper bound for the stable commutator length of generalized torsion elements. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |