NCMW - Recent Developments in Commutative Algebra (2025)

Speakers and Syllabus


Speaker Abbv. Affiliation Title
Krishna Hanumanthu KH Chennai
Mathematical
Institute,
Chennai, India

Seshadri constants with a view toward commutative algebra
Description: Seshadri constants were introduced by J.-P. Demailly in 1990, inspired by an ampleness criterion of C. S. Seshadri from the 1960s. These constants are defined for line bundles on projective varieties and measure local positivity of a line bundle at points on the variety. Let X be a projective variety, and let L be an ample line bundle on X. For a point xin X, the Seshadri constant of L at x is defined as the infimum, taken over all curves C passing through x, of the ratios \frac{L.C}{m}, where L.C denotes the intersection product of L and C, and m is the multiplicity of C at x. Seshadri constants provide insights into both the local behavior of L at x and certain global properties of X. They are connected to several fundamental problems in algebraic geometry.
Seshadri constants also have significant relevance from the point of view of commutative algebra. In recent years, there has been considerable interest in questions related to symbolic powers of homogeneous ideals in polynomial rings. Of particular interest is the case of ideals of points
in the projective space. If I is the ideal of a finite set Z of points, then the m-th symbolic power of I is the ideal of forms vanishing on Z to order at least m. An important question concerns containment relations between ordinary and symbolic powers of I. From a geometric perspective, it is important to study the Hilbert function of the symbolic powers of I. Many key concepts, such as Waldschmidt constants, are defined in this context. The famous Nagata conjecture can also be interpreted in terms of the symbolic powers of suitable ideals of points in the projective plane. It turns out that Seshadri constants are closely related to all these notions. In these lectures we will introduce Seshadri constants, emphasizing their connections with these ideas from commutative algebra.

Eloísa Grifo EG University of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA Homological methods in commutative algebra
Description: There is a long and fruitful tradition of applications of homological algebra techniques to commutative algebra, starting with the Auslander-Buchsbaum-Serre characterization of regular rings. In this lecture series, we will introduce some of those homological tools, with an eye towards classifying interesting classes of singularities.
Jack Jeffries JJ University of Nebraska - Lincoln, USA

An introduction to invariant theory
Description: Given a group action on a polynomial ring, one may ask which polynomials are fixed by every element of the group. The set of all such polynomials forms a ring, called the ring of invariants of the action. The study of such rings has motivated many key developments in Commutative Algebra—for example, Hilbert proved his famous Basis Theorem, Syzygy Theorem, and Nullstellensatz all in pursuit of finiteness properties of rings of invariants. In the aftermath of Hilbert, many beautiful results have established that rings of invariants have good ring-theoretic properties, or related favorable ring-theoretic properties to properties of the group action. In this series we will discuss some classical results on rings of invariants, as well as modern developments and questions in this field.

Claudia Polini CP University of Notre Dame, Indiana, USA Syzygies, Blowup Algebras, and Singularities of Rational Curves
Description: In this series of talks we will study rational curves in projective space, most notably rational plane curves, through the syzygy matrix of the forms parametrizing them. A rational plane curve C of degree d can be parametrized by three forms f_1,f_2,f_3 of degree d in the polynomial ring k[x,y], and the syzygy matrix F of these forms is easier to handle and often reveals more information than the implicit equation of C. Our goals are to read information about the singularities of C solely from the matrix F, to set up a correspondence between the types of singularities on the one hand and the shapes of the syzygy matrices on the other hand, and to use this correspondence to stratify the space of rational plane curves of a given degree. We will also explore the correspondence between the types of singularities of C and the defining ideal of the blowup algebra of the ideal I=(f_1, f_2, f_3). In fact the constellation of singularities is also reflected in strictly numerical information about the Rees ring of I, namely the first bigraded Betti numbers. The intermediary between singularity types and Rees algebras is once again the syzygy matrix F, or rather a matrix of linear forms derived from it.
Bernd Ulrich BU Purdue University, Indiana, USA Generalized multiplicities, integral dependance, and equisingularity
Description: The classical Hilbert Samuel multiplicity is only defined for zero-dimensional ideals in Noetherian local rings. Applications in equisingularity theory however require​ notions of multiplicity that apply to arbitrary ideals, in fact, to arbitrary submodules​ of free modules of finite rank. The mediator between multiplicity theory and equisingularity​ theory are multiplicity-based criteria for the integral dependence of ideals and modules. ​ The series of lectures will explain this circle of ideas. The notions of multiplicity to​ be discussed are the $j$-multiplicity, the $\varepsilon$-multiplicity, and generalizations​ of mixed multiplicities.

 

Tutors: 5 Tutors (each associated with two courses)

Tutor Abb v. Affiliation Courses associated to
Meghana Bhat MB IIT Dharwad, Dharwad, India KH+CP
Sudeshna Roy SR IIT Dharwad, Dharwad, India KH+BU
Suprajo Das SD IIT Madras, Chennai, India CP+BU
Aryaman Maithani AM University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA EG+JJ
Omkar Javadekar OJ IIT Bombay, Mumbai, India EG+JJ

Time Table

 Tentative time-table, mentioning names of the speakers and tutors

Date 9.00 10.20 10.20 10.30 10.30 11.30
Tutorial
11.30 11.40 11:40 13:00 13:00 14:30 14.30 15.50 15.50 16.00 16.00 17.00
Tutorial
24 Jun KH Tea Tut-KH Break EG Lunch JJ Tea Tut-EG
25 Jun KH   Tut- JJ   EG   JJ   Tut-KH
26 Jun KH   Tut-EG   EG   JJ   Tut-JJ
27 Jun CP   Tut-CP   BU   Sightseeing/ Discussion
28 Jun CP   Tut-BU   BU   Poster/
Discussion 
Tut-CP
29 Jun CP   Tut-BU   BU   Poster /
Discussion

 

 

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