The mysterious part of the fine curve graph

Series
Geometry Topology Student Seminar
Time
Wednesday, February 14, 2024 - 2:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Roberta Shapiro – Georgia Tech
Organizer
Thomas Rodewald

The fine curve graph of a surface is a graph whose vertices are essential simple closed curves in the surface and whose edges connect disjoint curves. Following a rich history of hyperbolicity in various graphs based on surfaces, the fine curve was shown to be hyperbolic by Bowden–Hensel–Webb. Given how well-studied the curve graph and the case of “up to isotopy” is, we ask: what about the mysterious part of the fine curve graph not captured by isotopy classes? In this talk, we introduce the result that the subgraph of the fine curve graph spanned by curves in a single isotopy class is not hyperbolic; indeed, it contains a flat of EVERY dimension. Along the way, we will discuss how to not prove this theorem as we explore proofs of hyperbolicity of related complexes. This work is joint with Ryan Dickmann.