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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100928T171500
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100928T171500
UID:5614@agenda.unifr.ch
DESCRIPTION:Surfaces of large genus are intriguing objects. What can or does a surface of large genus look like? Their geometry has been studied in different ways by finding geometric properties that hold for all surfaces of the same genus, and by finding families of surfaces with unexpected or extremal geometric behavior.\n\nA classical example of this is the size of systoles, i.e., the study of the shortest non-trivial loop on a surface. On the one hand Gromov showed that there exists a universal constant $C$ such that any (orientable) surface of genus $g$ with area normalized to $g$ has a systole of length less than $C log(g)$. On the other hand, Buser and Sarnak constructed a family of hyperbolic surfaces where the systole length grows roughly like $log(g)$. Another important example, in particular for the study of hyperbolic surfaces and related Teichmüller spaces, is the question of finding of short pants decompositions, introduced by Bers.\n\nThe talk will discuss some ideas on how to further this understanding of surfaces of large genus through the study of curves on surfaces. In particular, I'll relate some recent progress in the study of systoles, pants decompositions and other sets of short curves including upper bounds on pants decompositions (joint work with F. Balacheff and S. Sabourau), and how to use random constructions to obtain surfaces with large pants decompositions (joint work with L. Guth and R. Young).<br />\n[Invited by R. Kellerhals]
SUMMARY:Prof. Dr. Hugo PARLIER (Fribourg): Surfaces of large genus
CATEGORIES:Colloque / Congrès / Forum
LOCATION:PER 08\, Phys 2.52\, Chemin du Musée 3\, 1700 Fribourg
URL;VALUE=URI:https://agenda.unifr.ch/e/fr/5614
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