We study compactifications of real semi-algebraic sets that arise from embeddings into complete toric varieties. This makes it possible to describe the asymptotic growth of polynomial functions on such sets in terms of combinatorial data. We discuss the phenomena that arise in examples along with some applications to positive polynomials. (Joint work with Claus Scheiderer)
Monday, February 15, 2016 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Noah Giansiracusa – University of Georgia
I'll discuss joint work with my brother Jeff Giansiracusa in which we introduce an exterior algebra and wedge product in the idempotent setting that play for tropical linear spaces (i.e., valuated matroids) a very similar role as the usual ones do for vector spaces. In particular, by working over the Boolean semifield this gives a new perspective on matroids.
Monday, February 8, 2016 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Felipe Pérez – Georgia State University
For the last four decades, mathematicians have used the Frobenius map to investigate phenomena in several fields of mathematics including Algebraic Geometry. The goal of this talk is twofold, first to give a brief introduction to the study of singularities in positive characteristic (aided by the Frobenius map). Second to define an explain the constancy regions for mixed test ideals in the case of a regular ambient; an invariant associated to a family of functions that shows a Fractal behavior.
Monday, February 1, 2016 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Dustin Cartwright – UT Knoxville
The dual complex of a semistable degeneration records the combinatorics of the intersections in the special fiber. More generally, one can associate a polyhedral dual complex to any toroidal degeneration. It is natural to ask for connections between the geometry of an algebraic variety and the combinatorial properties of its dual complex. In this talk, I will explain one such result: The dual complex of an n-dimensional uniruled variety has the homotopy type of an (n-1)-dimensional simplicial complex. The key technical tool is a specialization map to dual complexes and a balancing condition for these specialization.
Monday, January 25, 2016 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Bo Lin – UC Berkeley
A Linear system on metric graphs is a set of effective divisors. It has the structure of a cell complex. We introduce the anchor divisors in it - they serve as the landmarks for us to compute the f-vector of the complex and find all cells in the complex. A linear system can also be identified as a tropical convex hull of rational functions. We can also compute the extremal generators of the tropical convex hull using the landmarks. We apply these methods to some examples - K4 and K3,3..
Monday, January 11, 2016 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Louis Rowen – Bar-Ilan University
Tropicalization involves passing to an ordered group M, usually taken to be
(R, +) or (Q, +), and viewed as a semifield. Although there is a rich theory arising from
this viewpoint, idempotent semirings possess a restricted algebraic structure theory, and
also do not reflect important valuation-theoretic properties, thereby forcing researchers to
rely often on combinatoric techniques.
Our research in tropical algebra has focused on coping with the fact that the max-plus’
algebra lacks negation, which is used throughout the classical structure theory of modules.
At the outset one is confronted with the obstacle that different cosets need not be disjoint,
which plays havoc with the traditional structure theory.
Building on an idea of Gaubert and his group (including work of Akian and Guterman),
we introduce a general way of artificially providing negation, in a manner similar to the
construction of Z from N but with one crucial difference necessitated by the fact that the
max-plus algebra is not additively cancelative! This leads to the possibility of defining many
auxiliary tropical structures, such as Lie algebras and exterior algebras, and also providing
a key ingredient for a module theory that could enable one to use standard tools such as
homology.
Given a graph G on p vertices we consider the cone of concentration matrices associated to G; that is, the cone of all (p x p) positive semidefinite matrices with zeros in entries corresponding to the nonedges of G. Due to its applications in PSD-completion problems and maximum-likelihood estimation, the geometry of this cone is of general interest. A natural pursuit in this geometric investigation is to characterize the possible ranks of the extremal rays of this cone. We will investigate this problem combinatorially using the cut polytope of G and its semidefinite relaxation, known as the elliptope of G. For the graphs without K_5 minors, we will see that the facet-normals of the cut polytope identify a distinguished set of extremal rays for which we can recover the ranks. In the case that these graphs are also series-parallel we will see that all extremal ranks are given in this fashion. Time permitting, we will investigate the potential for generalizing these results. This talk is based on joint work with Caroline Uhler and Ruriko Yoshida.
Let det_n be the homogeneous
polynomial obtained by taking the determinant of an n x n matrix of
indeterminates. In this presentation linear maps called Young
flattenings will be defined and will be used to show new lower bounds on
the symmetric border rank of det_n.
Monday, November 9, 2015 - 15:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005 or 006
Speaker
Caroline Uhler – MIT
Exponential varieties arise from exponential families in statistics. These real algebraic varieties have strong positivity and convexity properties, generalizing those of toric varieties and their moment maps. Another special class, including Gaussian graphical models, are varieties of inverses of symmetric matrices satisfying linear constraints. We develop a general theory of exponential varieties, with focus on those defined by hyperbolic polynomials. Joint work with Mateusz Michałek, Bernd Sturmfels, and Piotr Zwiernik.