Johns Hopkins Category Theory Seminar (original) (raw)

Spring 2022 Schedule (almost always on Tuesday, pretalk 4-5pm, talk 5:30-6:30pm)


Fall 2021 Schedule (essentially every Wednesday; pretalk 4:30-5:30pm, talk 6-7pm)


Fall 2020 Schedule (various Wednesdays; gather 5pm, talk 5:15pm Baltimore time; zoom connection information and time zone conversation will be available at researchseminars.org):


Spring 2020 Schedule (single talk; 2:30pm-4pm UTC; zoom connection information available at mathseminars.org):


Fall 2019 Schedule (most Tuesdays; pretalk 4pm, talk 5:30pm):

Title: Why (algebraic/arithmetic) geometers care about topos theory?
Abstract:
This talk is meant to be a rather informal discussion on the topic in the title. I will bring some materials and scatter around on what motivated Grothendieck to find the notion of topoi, how is it effective as a vastly generalized notion of spaces. More specifically, I will mention several topologies on the categories of (affine) schemes and its abelian sheaf cohomology (such as etale cohomology), locally ringed spaces (or more generally structured spaces) and algebraic spaces, and some other things, and try to elaborate accordingly (with help of participants).

Title: The Big Picture
Abstract:
We peek in at the internal logic of the big Zariski topos of a scheme. Here, the affine line A behaves as one would naively hope for algebraic geometry: the ring of functions (any functions) on the locus of zeros of polynomials f_1 ... f_n is the polynomial ring A[x_1,...,x_m]/(f_1,...,f_n). We explore some consequences of this fact: A is an algebraically closed* field* with nilpotent infinitesimals*.
We will end by wondering aloud about how to work with monoidal structures in an internal way.
*Come and see what these words mean internally!


Spring 2019 Schedule (intermittent Tuesdays; pretalk 4pm, talk 5:30pm):

Title: Analytic Monads as Infinity Operads
Abstract:
In section four we learned that analytic endofunctor are identified with preshaves on elementary trees, or equivalently as preshaves on the category of trees with inert morphisms. This is almost dendroidal spaces, but we are missing an extension to the full tree category Ω. This amounts to adding the “active” maps, which control the multicomposition of dendroidal sets. It's not too far fetched then to believe that this extension relates to adding a multiplicative structure to our analytic endofunctors. In my second talk I will sketch the proof of this equivalence between dendroidal segal spaces and analytic monads.


Fall 2018 Schedule (random Thursdays; talk 4pm, open discussion 5:30pm):

Why should you care? If you think that quasi-coherent sheaves of modules are complicated, but modules are simple, then the internal logic may be right for you; in the internal logic of a category of sheaves, a quasi-coherent sheaf of modules is just a module, and therefore all theorems* about modules proved normally are proved for quasi-coherent sheaves.

*terms and conditions may (and will) apply.


Spring 2018 Schedule (sporadic Thursdays; pretalk 4pm, talk 5:30pm; Shaffer 2):


Fall 2017 Schedule (approximately alternate Thursdays; pretalk 4pm, talk 5:30pm; Krieger 413):


Fall 2016 Schedule (Occasional Mondays; pretalk 3pm, talk 4:30pm; Maryland 114):


Questions?

Contact Emily Riehl.