SMS scnews item created by Hannah Bryant at Thu 25 Nov 2021 1557
Type: Seminar
Modified: Thu 2 Dec 2021 1109
Distribution: World
Expiry: 2 Dec 2021
Calendar1: 2 Dec 2021 1500-1630
CalLoc1: Online via Zoom
Auth: hannahb@staff-10-48-18-46.vpnuser.sydney.edu.au (hbry8683) in SMS-SAML
SMRI Algebra and Geometry Online: Kelly -- Blowup formulas for nilpotent sensitive cohomology theories
SMRI Algebra and Geometry Online
'Blowup formulas for nilpotent sensitive cohomology theories'
Shane Kelly (Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Thursday 2nd December
3:00pm-4:30pm (AEDT)
Register:
https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIpd-yrqTgiGNUmqRgkI8-aAMHiHP9TfmLc
Abstract: This is joint work in progress with Shuji Saito. Many cohomology theories of
interest (l-adic cohomology, de Rham cohomology, motivic cohomology, K-theory...) have
long exact sequences associated to blowups. Such a property can be neatly encoded in a
Grothendieck topology such as the cdh-topology or the h-topology. These topologies
appeared in Voevodsky's proof of the Bloch-Kato conjecture, and more recently in
Beilinson's simple proof of Fontaine's CdR conjecture, and in Bhatt and Scholze's work
on projectivity of the affine Grassmanian.
A feature of these topologies which often turns out to be a bug is that the associated
sheaves cannot see nilpotents. In this talk I will discuss a modification which can see
nilpotents, and which still has long exact sequences for many blowups.
Biography: Shane Kelly is an Associate Professor at Tokyo Institute of Technology. His
research area is algebraic K-theory and motivic homotopy theory, and more recently he is
interested in applications to representation theory. His graduate studies were mostly
based in Paris; in 2012 he received a PhD jointly from Université Sorbonne Paris Nord
and The Australian National University under the joint supervision of Cisinski and
Neeman, respectively.
Note: These seminars will be recorded, including participant questions (participants
only when asking questions), and most will be uploaded to the SMRI YouTube Channel
https://www.youtube.com/c/SydneyMathematicalResearchInstituteSMRI
Other upcoming SMRI events can be found here:
https://mathematical-research-institute.sydney.edu.au/news-events/