Seminários, para a disseminação informal de resultados de investigação, trabalho exploratório de equipas de investigação, actividades de difusão, etc., constituem a forma mais simples de encontros num centro de investigação de matemática.
O CAMGSD regista e publica o calendário dos seus seminários há bastante tempo, servindo páginas como esta não só como um método de anúncio dessas actividades mas também como um registo histórico.
We present a bicategorical state sum construction for 3-manifold invariants. Using the pivotal bicategory of spherical module categories over a spherical fusion category, we construct invariants that manifestly preserve Morita equivalence. Our main result shows that this bicategorical invariant recovers the standard Turaev–Viro invariant, thereby proving Morita invariance of Turaev–Viro invariants without appealing to the Reshetikhin–Turaev construction.
This is joint work with Jürgen Fuchs, David Jaklitsch, and Christoph Schweigert.
Many dualities in mathematics arise from the inherent duality of ‘syntax’ and ‘semantics’ in logic. Classical Stone duality, for example, is the syntax-semantics duality for theories of classical propositional logic, with Boolean algebras encoding the syntax of a propositional theory. The logical perspective on these ‘syntax-semantics’ dualities gives both an intuitive understanding for why mathematicians (or at least logicians) would expect these dualities to hold in the first place, as well as a framework to generalise to nearby logics.
In recent years, new ‘non-commutative’ generalisations of Stone duality have been discovered, involving inverse monoids and étale groupoids. Interestingly, this branch of duality theory was developed in the absence of a logical description. In this talk, we describe a class oflogical theories whose syntax-semantics duality is given by a version of non-commutative Stone duality. Rather than originating in an exotic fragment of logic, these are theories of first-order logic which share many of the same properties as the theory of vector spaces, suggesting that non-commutative Stone duality is not so distant from classical logic as one might expect.