YoVDO

Tropical Contributions to Enumerative Geometry of Target Dimension One - Lecture 2

Offered By: Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematics and Physics (ESI) via YouTube

Tags

Tropical Geometry Courses Moduli Space Courses Enumerative Geometry Courses

Course Description

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Explore the second lecture in a series on tropical geometry's contributions to enumerative geometry, focusing on target dimension one. Delve into the development of tropical Hurwitz numbers as combinatorial analogues for classical Hurwitz numbers. Examine the interpretation of tropical Hurwitz numbers as intersection numbers of double ramification cycles with elements of the log Chow ring. Investigate the concept of branch polynomials and their relation to tropical moduli spaces of covers. Learn about k-DR cycles and their associated piecewise polynomial functions, leading to k-analogues of Hurwitz numbers called leaky Hurwitz numbers. Discover ongoing research incorporating descendants into these frameworks, including tropical algorithms yielding simple formulas for fully ramified points. Gain insights from years of collaborative work in this field, presented by Renzo Cavalieri at the Workshop on "Non-commutative Geometry meets Topological Recursion" held at the Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematics and Physics.

Syllabus

Renzo Cavalieri - Tropical contributions to enumerative geometry of target dimension one - Lecture 2


Taught by

Erwin Schrödinger International Institute for Mathematics and Physics (ESI)

Related Courses

One-Dimensional Objects - Algebraic Topology
Insights into Mathematics via YouTube
Distinguishing Monotone Lagrangians via Holomorphic Annuli - Ailsa Keating
Institute for Advanced Study via YouTube
Pseudoholomorphic Curves with Boundary - Can You Count Them? Can You Really? - Sara Tukachinsky
Institute for Advanced Study via YouTube
Mixing Surfaces, Algebra, and Geometry
Joint Mathematics Meetings via YouTube
Representations of Fuchsian Groups, Parahoric Group Schemes by Vikraman Balaji
International Centre for Theoretical Sciences via YouTube