- Series
- CDSNS Colloquium
- Time
- Monday, October 6, 2014 - 11:00am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- William Gignac – School of Mathematics Georgia Inst. Technology
- Organizer
- Rafael de la Llave
In this talk, we will discuss a question
posed by Vladimir Arnold some twenty years ago, in a subject he called
"dynamics of intersections." In the simplest setting, the question is
the following: given a (discrete time) holomorphic dynamical system on a
complex manifold X and two holomorphic curves C and D in X which pass
through a fixed point P of the system, how quickly can the local
intersection multiplicies at P of C with the iterates of D grow in time?
Questions like this arise naturally, for instance, when trying to count
the periodic points of a dynamical system. Arnold conjectured that this
sequence of intersection multiplicities can grow at most exponentially
fast, and in fact we can show this conjecture is true if the curves are
chosen to be suitably generic. However, as we will see, for some (even
very simple) dynamical systems one can choose curves so that the
intersection multiplicities grow as fast as desired. We will see how to
construct such counterexamples to Arnold's conjecture, using geometric
ideas going back to work of Yoshikazu Yamagishi.