Annual Southeast Geometry
Conference
University of Georgia
Athens, Georgia
April 19--21, 2002
The SEGC is an annual gathering
of geometers of all stripes from around the Southeast and elsewhere. All
geometers are cordially invited. If you would like to present your
work at the conference, please contact Joe Fu at fu@math.uga.edu.
Financial Support
Some financial support is available
for graduate students and other unsupported researchers.
For more information please contact
Jason Cantarella at cantarella@math.uga.edu.
Schedule of talks
All talks will be held in the Boyd Graduate
Studies Research Center, Room 328
Friday, April 19, 2002
Registration
1:30p.m., Room 409
2:00-2:45
Speaker: John McCuan, Georgia Tech
Title of talk: Symmetry for a coupled
system of elliptic PDE
Abstract: I will discuss a
system of coupled elliptic equations inspired by a problem involving an
electrostatically deflected soap film. Included will be aspects of
the variational derivation, common approximate equations used in applications,
and questions of symmetry. The symmetry discussion involves a delicate
argument
involving the Serrin-G-N-N corner lemma in dimensions
2 and 3.
3:00-3:45
Speaker: Haydee Herrera, Tufts University
Title of talk: TBA
Abstract: TBA
3:45 - Coffee, Juice, Cookies, Room 409
4:15-5:00
Speaker: Tom Ivey, College of Charleston
Title of talk: "Elastic rods and isoperiodic
deformations of NLS potentials"
Abstract: Solutions of the vortex filament
flow (VFF) for space curves correspond to solutions of the nonlinear Schrodinger
equation (NLS) under the Hasimoto/Sym transformation. In particular,
stationary curves for variational problems involving VFF-conserved Lagrangians,
including Kirchoff elastic rods, correspond to finite-gap NLS solutions,
at fixed time. Moreover, one-parameter families of closed elastic
rods, explicitly obtained by Ivey and Singer, correspond to the isoperiodic
deformation of periodic NLS potentials developed by Grinevich and Schmidt.
The relationship between geometrical/topological
properties of closed space curves and the spectrum of periodic potentials
is the focus of ongoing joint work with Annalisa Calini (College of Charleston).
While it is difficult, in general, to distinguish the spectra of closed
curves, we have developed a way of harnessing the isoperiodic deformations
to produce closed curves of arbitrary complexity. Using the deformation
family as organizing principle, we also have a conjectural picture
of how geometrical/topological properties of closed elastic rods
correspond to special properties of the spectrum.
5:15-6:00
Speaker: Weiqing Gu, Harvey Mudd College
Title of talk: Examples of Cayley Manifolds
Abstract: We present several families
of so-called Cayley 4-dimensional manifolds in the real Euclidean 8-space.
Such manifolds are of interest because Cayley 4-manifolds and Cayley 4-cycles
in Calabi-Yau 4-folds and Spin(7) holonomy manifolds are supersymmetric
cycles that are candidates for representations of fundamental particles
in String Theory. Moreover, some of the examples of Cayley manifolds discovered
in this paper may be modified to construct explicit examples in our current
search for new holomorphic invariants for Calabi-Yau 4-folds and for the
further development of mirror symmetry. We apply the classic results of
Harvey and Lawson to find Cayley manifolds which are graphs of functions
from the set of quaternions to itself and which are invariant under certain
three dimensional subgroups of Spin(7).
Saturday, April 20, 2002
Coffee, Juice, Bagels
9:00, Room 409
9:30-10:15
Speaker: John Sullivan, Univ. of Illinois
Title of talk: Simulations of Tight
Links
Abstract: We consider certain smooth knot
energies which approximate ropelength, and appropriate discretizations
of these for polygonal links. We describe numerical simulations with Brakke's
Evolver, looking for
tight configurations of small knots and links.
10:30-11:15
Speaker: Elizabeth Denne, Univ. of Illinois
Title of talk: Quadrisecants of Knots
Abstract: A _quadrisecant _is a straight
line that intersects a knot in four distinct points. It is interesting
to compare the linear ordering of intersection points along the quadrisecant
with the cyclic ordering of the intersection points along the knot. There
are two such orderings, called _NSNS_ and _NNSS._ NSNS quadrisecants have
implications for other geometric properties such as the curvature of the
knot. In this talk, I will outline a proof that any non-trivial tame knot
has a NSNS quadrisecant.
11:30-12:15
Speaker: Yuanan Diao, Univ. of North Carolina,
Charlotte
Title of talk: The
Linear Growth In The Lengths Of A Family Of Thick Knots, (Joint work
with Claus Ernst and Morwen Thistlethwaite)
Abstract: For
any given knot $K$, a thick realization $K_0$ of $K$ is a knot of unit
thickness which is of the same knot type with $K$. In this talk, we show
that there exist a family of prime knots $\{{ K}_n\}$ with the property
that $Cr({K}_n)\to \infty$ (as $n\to \infty$) such that the arc-length
of any thick realization of ${K}_n$ will
grow at least
linearly with respect to $Cr({K}_n)$.
Afternoon Session
2:00-2:45
Speaker: Conrad Plaut, Univ. of Tennesee.
Title of talk: Geometry
of the groups L^p([0,1],Z)
Abstract: The
group G^p of integer-valued functions in L^p is a metric group with
the metric induced by the ususal L^p metric. On the one hand, this group
is a kind of generalized lattice, with a covering radius and "deep holes."
On
the other
hand, the group is globally contractible through homotheties, and
has many self-similarities. G^1 is an inner metric space, whose non-trivial
geodesics are nowhere differentiable as curves in L^1. For p>1 all non-trivial
curves in
G^p have the property that their p-dimensional Hausdorff measure is
positive. The special case G^2 turns out to be a kind of universal lattice,
in which every finite dimensional lattice can be isometrically embedded.
3:00-3:45
Speaker: Kris Tapp, SUNY Stony Brook.
Title of talk: Conditions for nonnegative
and positive curvature on bundles.
Abstract: I will discuss tools for
addressing the following two questions: (1) which vector bundles admit
nonnegative sectional curvature, (2) which sphere bundles admit positive
sectional curvature? I will explain old and new relationships between
these two questions, and I will discuss a classification (joint with Gromoll)
of nonnegatively curved metrics on
$S^2 \times R^2$.
Coffee, Juice, Cookies
3:45, Room 409
4:15-5:00
Speaker: Chaim Goodman-Strauss, Univ.
of Arkansas.
Title of talk: "Triangles"
Abstract: We introduce the use of "regular
substitution systems"--- a certain generalization of symbolic substitution
systems--- as a tool for analyzing tilings and more arbitrary complexes
defined by combinatorial rules, though
in this talk we are particularly interested in
tilings of the hyperbolic plane.
As an application, we conjecture necessary and
sufficient conditions under which we may tile the sphere, hyperbolic or
Euclidean plane by copies of a given triangle, and prove the conjecture
on all but a measure-zero set in the space of all triangles. We give a
new proof of Poincar\'e's Triangle theorem as an aside.
We also show most triangles that do tile are
"weakly aperiodic"; that is, they admit tilings, and admit tilings that
are invariant under some infinite cyclic symmetry, but do not admit tilings
with a compact fundamental domain.
5:15-6:00
Speaker: Jeanne Clelland, University of
Colorado, Boulder
Title of talk: Backlund
transformations of hyperbolic Monge-Ampere equations
Abstract: Backlund transformations provide
a method for contructing new solutions of a partial differential
equation from a known solution. The new solutions are constructed
by solving ordinary differential equations. These transformations
are known to exist for certain special PDEs - in particular, for
most integrable systems - but it is not known what conditions a PDE
must satisfy in order to have a Backlund transformation. In
this talk I will describe some classical Backlund transformations
of hyperbolic Monge-Ampere equations in terms of exterior differential
systems. Using Cartan's method of equivalence we can classify
the homogenous examples, i.e., those transformations having maximal
symmetry. In the process, we discover a family of previously
unknown Backlund transformations between timelike surfaces of constant
mean curvature in 3-dimensional
Lorentzian space forms.
Sunday, April 21, 2002
Coffee, Juice, Bagels
9:00, Room 409
9:30-10:15
Speaker: Casim Abbas, Michigan State University.
Title of talk: The Chord Problem in
Contact Geometry and Fillings by Pseudoholomorphic Curves
Abstract: On a contact manifold there
is a distinguished vector field, the Reeb vector field, and its dynamics
can be used to define invariants for contact manifolds. The interesting
objects are periodic orbits of the Reeb vector field and characteristic
chords for Legendrian knots. In my talk I will present a global existence
result for characteristic chords using pseudoholomorphic curve techniques.
10:30-11:15
Speaker: Sungwok Lee, Univ. of Southern
Mississippi.
Title of talk: Space-Like Surfaces
of Constant Mean Curvature in the De Sitter 3-Space and the Gauss Map
Abstract: A Bryant type representation
formula for space-like surfaces of constant mean curvature 1 (abbreviated
as CMC 1) in the de Sitter 3-space ${\mathbb S}^3_1$ is obtained. The formula
is used to investigate a 1:1 correspondence between CMC 1 space-like surfaces
in ${\mathbb S}^3_1$ and maximal space-like surfaces in the Minkowski 3-space
${\mathbb L}^3$. Three types of Gauss maps (the secondary, hyperbolic,
and generalized Gauss map are discussed, and their relationships to each
other are investigated. A duality property of CMC 1 space-like surfaces
in ${\mathbb S}^3_1$ is also studied. Some examples of CMC 1 space-like
surfaces in ${\mathbb S}^3_1$ are presented.
11:30-12:15
Speaker: Chris Mosely, Agnes Scott College
Title of talk: Geodesics of Sub-Riemannian
Engel Manifolds
Abstract: An Engel system is a smooth
2-plane field $D$ in a four-manifold M with the property that $D + [D,D]$
has rank 3 everywhere and $D + [D,D] + [D, [D,D]] = TM$. The equations
of for both regular and non-regular sub-Riemannian geodesics in $M$ are
derived from canonical local structure equations on $M$, a result of a
covering space theorem for Engel manifolds. Examples of sub-Riemannian
geodesics on Lie groups are explicitly solved.
Accomodations
A block of rooms has been set aside
for conference participants at the Days
Inn, Athens
230 N. Finley Street, Athens, GA
706-543-6511.
Travel Information
Direct flights to Athens are available
through USAir. However it is likely
to prove more convenient and cost-efficient to fly into Hartsfield International
Airport in Atlanta. The shuttle
from Hartsfield to Athens goes directly to the Georgia Center.
Dining On Campus
UGA Creamery
Georgia
Center for Continuing Education
-
Restaurant (The Savannah Room)
Tate Student Center (The Bulldog
Room) 7:30 am - 3:00 p.m., Monday-Friday.
UGA
Visitor's Information
Athens
Convention and Visitors Bureau
Athens
Weather
Page last updated April 9, 2002