Student seminar on Floer theory and pseudoholomorphic curves

UC Berkeley, Fall 2003


We're taking a break at the moment (spring 2004) due to the large number of advanced topology courses and lectures currently going on.


Organizer

Michael Hutchings
hutching@math.berkeley.edu
Office phone: 510-642-4329.
Office: 923 Evans.
Office hours: TBA.

Goals

Floer theory and pseudoholomorphic curves and their applications to low-dimensional and symplectic topology are currently the subject of much active and exciting research. Participants in this seminar will read recent research papers or essential background materials in the area and give talks about them. Abundant questioning and discussion is encouraged. The goal of the seminar is to get up to speed and keep up with current research, learn more about the background that we are supposed to know, and maybe think about new research topics. This seminar was begun in Spring 2003 and will continue as long as there is sufficient interest.

Prerequisites

In addition to basic knowledge of graduate-level geometry and topology, the most important prerequisite is a strong motivation to teach yourself stuff and ask questions. The lecture notes and bibliography from the topics course that I taught in Fall 2002 (click here) could be helpful. If you didn't follow all of that course or weren't around for it, don't worry: now is your chance to really learn something! Like a soap opera, one can jump into this seminar at any time; previous semesters are not a prerequisite.

Spacetime coordinates

Wednesdays, 11:00-12:30, 959 Evans. Since the schedule is already pretty full and we have a lot to do, we may sometimes have additional talks at other times.

Suggested topics

Here is the handout from last semester suggesting some possible starting points. Some of these were discussed last semester but could be discussed further. You are free to do other things, and I am happy to meet with you individually to help you select a specific topic.

I mentioned some additional references in the first meeting on 9/3. Namely, Seidel's lecture notes that he recently posted on the preprint server, Seidel's paper about knotted Lagrangians, Bourgeois's lecture notes about contact homology / SFT and his preprint about families of contact structures, the Fukaya-Oh paper in Asian J. Math, Fukaya's paper about the Casson invariant and the theta graph, and the Siebert-Tian paper about unknottedness of symplectic surfaces in CP^2.

Schedule of talks

Talks from the previous semester