Monday, October 24 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
09:15 - 09:30 |
Introduction and Welcome (Conference Room San Felipe) |
09:30 - 10:30 |
Adam Levine: Using Heegaard Floer homology to construct interesting 4-manifolds ↓ We will look at some new constructions of closed exotic 4-manifolds that can be detected using Ozsvath-Szabo's closed 4-manifold invariants. We build these from the ground up, looking at 3-manifolds with relatively small Heegaard Floer homology groups on which we can explicitly understand 2-handle cobordism maps and mapping class group actions. This is joint work with Tye Lidman and Lisa Piccirillo. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 12:00 |
Dror Bar-Natan: Cars, Interchanges, Traffic Counters, and a Pretty Darned Good Knot Invariant ↓ Reporting on joint work with Roland van der Veen, I'll tell you some stories about ρ1, an easy to define, strong, fast to compute, homomorphic, and well-connected knot invariant. ρ1 was first studied by Rozansky and Overbay, it is dominated by the coloured Jones polynomial (but it isn't lesser!), it has far-reaching generalizations, and I wish I understood it.
Further content at http://drorbn.net/oa22 (Conference Room San Felipe.) |
12:15 - 13:15 |
Kyle Hayden: Khovanov homology and knotted surfaces ↓ I will survey recent developments that show Khovanov homology to be an effective tool for studying knotted surfaces in the 4-ball. We will take a broad view, including some comparisons with tools from Floer homology and gauge theory, and I will suggest potential directions for further development of these Khovanov-theoretic tools. (This draws on joint work with subsets of {Alan Du, Gary Guth, Sungkyung Kang, Seungwon Kim, Maggie Miller, JungHwan Park, and Isaac Sundberg}.) (Conference Room San Felipe) |
13:20 - 13:30 |
Group Photo (Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
13:30 - 15:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
15:00 - 16:00 |
Mihai Marian: The Heegaard Floer theory of (1,1)-knots ↓ In the world of Heegaard Floer theory, the simplest class of 3-manifolds is the class of L-spaces and the simplest class of knots is the class of (1,1)-knots. With the objective of understanding the Dehn-surgery landscape of L-spaces, it is natural to restrict to this class of knots. In this context, a theorem due to Greene, Lewallen and Vafaee provides a criterion for the existence of a (non-infinite) surgery slope on any given (1,1)-knot that yields an L-space. This criterion is wonderfully simple and, during my MSc, I reproved their theorem for knots that satisfy an additionnal technical assumption by using the immersed curve formalism due to Hanselman, Rasmussen and Watson. In this talk I will describe to you the Heegaard Floer theory of (1,1)-knots, where the objects are completely explicit and the computations are combinatorial, and I will tell you about the work I did. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |