Regulators V

Europe/Rome
Department of Mathematics, University of Pisa

Department of Mathematics, University of Pisa

Description

Speakers

Amina Abdurrahman (Stony Brook) 
Tomoyuki Abe (Kavli IPMU) 
Joseph Ayoub (University of Zurich) 
Tom Bachmann (University of Mainz) 
Amnon Besser (Ben Gurion University) 
Spencer Bloch (University of Chicago) 
Francis Brown (Oxford University) 
François Brunault (École normale supérieure de Lyon) 
Laura Capuano (Roma Tre) 
Caterina Consani (John Hopkins University) 
Rob de Jeu (Vrije Universiteit) 
Robin de Jong (University of Leiden) 
Javier Fresán (École polytechnique)

Martin Gallauer (University of Warwick)
Herbert Gangl (Durham University) 
Evangelia Gazaki (University of Virginia)

Thomas Geisser (Rikkyo University) 
Alexander Goncharov (Yale University) 
Souvik Goswami (University of Barcelona) 
Phillip Griffiths (Institute for Advanced Study) 
Annette Huber-Klawitter (University of Freiburg) 
Matt Kerr (Washington University, St. Louis) 
Matilde Lalı́n (University of Montreal) 
Davide Lombardo (University of Pisa) 
Rita Pardini (University of Pisa) 
Sujatha Ramdorai (University of British Columbia) 
Takeshi Saito (University of Tokyo) 
Emre Sertöz (Hannover/Leiden University) 
Vasudevan Srinivas (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research) 
Pierre Vanhove (Institut de Physique théorique) 
Alberto Vezzani (University of Milan) 
Kirsten Wickelgren (Duke University) 
Wei Zhang (MIT)


Scientific Committee

Alexander Beilinson (University of Chicago) 
José Ignacio Burgos Gil (ICMAT, Madrid) 
Hélène Esnault (Freie Universität Berlin) 
Marc Levine (University of Essen) 
Vincent Maillot (Institut de Mathématiques de Jussieu0 
Shuji Saito (University of Tokyo)


Organizers

Federico Binda (University of Milan) 
James Lewis (University of Alberta) 
Deepam Patel (Purdue University) 
Gregory Pearlstein (University of Pisa) 
Tamás Szamuely (University of Pisa)

 

    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Higher regulators of the ring of integers 1h

      In keeping with the title of the conference, the first half of my talk will review the celebrated results of Borel, Minkowski, Quillen, and others on the rational K-theory of the integers, the stable cohomology of the general linear group, and the computation of the regulator in terms of odd zeta values.

      The second half of the talk will cover very recent results due to many authors who have completely transformed our understanding of this field. If time permits, I plan to discuss some of the following topics: how the Borel regulator is related to certain motives of graphs constructed by Bloch, Esnault, and Kreimer; how to construct an algebraic incarnation of the Borel-Serre compactification of $GL_n(\mathbb{Z})$; why the cohomology of $GL_n(\mathbb{Z})$ has additional structures; and finally, why we expect iterated extensions of motives to appear in its unstable cohomology.

      Speaker: Francis Brown (Oxford University)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Picard–Fuchs Equations of Dimensionally Regulated Feynman Integrals 1h

      Feynman integrals are relative period integrals. In this lecture, I will discuss various algorithms for determining the D-module of differential equations satisfied by the Feynman integrals. In integer dimension, we have a (relative) period of a rational differential form. One approach is the use of the Griffiths-Dwork algorithms, which have been adapted to the case of non-isolated singularities, generically present for Feynman integrals. The analysis will be illustrated with a class of two-loop Feynman integrals. The study of the geometry and Hodge theory of the cubic hypersurfaces attached to two-loop Feynman integrals for generic physical parameters will be presented. We will demonstrate that the Hodge structure associated with planar two-loop Feynman graphs decomposes into mixed Tate pieces and the Hodge structures of families of hyperelliptic, elliptic, or rational curves, depending on the space-time dimension. In general dimensions, we have a twisted differential form. We will then explain how to extend the Griffiths-Dwork reduction, making particular use of the properties of the graph polynomials entering the definition of the integrand. We will examine the manner in which the twist is incorporated into the Picard-Fuchs operators.

      Speaker: Pierre Vanhove (Institut de Physique théorique)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Euler's constant and exponential motives 1h

      In the category of exponential motives over $\mathbb{Q}$ there is a new extension of $\mathbb{Q}(-1)$ by $\mathbb{Q}(0)$ which does not come from classical motives. Its period matrix features Euler's constant, which one is tempted to think of as the regularised value of Riemann's zeta function at 1. I will discuss several results and open questions revolving around this extension, for example the role it plays as a "monodromy factor" for differential equations of E-functions. The talk is based on joint work with Peter Jossen.

      Speaker: Javier Fresán (Ecole Polytechnique)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      $K_2$ of elliptic curves over non-Abelian cubic and quartic fields 1h

      After a review of some earlier results on (mostly) $K_2$ of curves, we give constructions of families of elliptic curves over certain cubic or quartic fields with three, respectively four, ‘integral’ elements in the kernel of the tame symbol on the curves. The fields are in general non-Abelian, and the elements linearly independent. For their integrality, we discuss a new criterion that does not ignore any torsion. We also verify Beilinson’s conjecture numerically for some of the curves. This is joint work with François Brunault, Liu Hang, and Fernando Rodriguez Villegas.

      Speaker: Rob de Jeu (Vrije Universiteit)
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Modular regulators and multiple modular values 1h

      I will present newly constructed elements in the $K_4$ group of modular curves, and explain how to compute their regulators in terms of L-functions of modular forms. One crucial tool is the theory of multiple modular values by Manin and Brown. This is joint work with Wadim Zudilin.

      Speaker: François Brunault (École Normale Supérieure de Lyon)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Linear relations between 1-periods 1h

      I will sketch a modestly practical algorithm to compute all linear relations with algebraic coefficients between any given finite set of 1-periods. As a special case, we can algorithmically decide transcendence of 1-periods. This is based on the “qualitative description” of these relations by Huber and Wüstholz. We combine their result with the recent work on computing the endomorphism ring of abelian varieties. This is a work in progress with Jöel Ouaknine and James Worrell.

      Speaker: Emre Sertöz (Leiden University)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Heights and periods of limit mixed Hodge structures 1h

      This is a report on joint work with Spencer Bloch and Emre Sertöz. We aim to establish connections between the arithmetic height of certain cycles found in the resolution of odd-dimensional nodal projective hypersurfaces defined over the rationals, and periods of limit mixed Hodge structures found in the smoothening of such hypersurfaces.

      Speaker: Robin de Jong (University of Leiden)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      Generalized Cross-Ratios 1h

      For $\mathsf{P}$ smooth projective variety of dim. $n$ over $\mathbb{C}$ complex numbers; $Y=Y_1-Y_2 $codim r algebraic cycle, $Z=Z_1-Z_2$ dim $r-1$ algebraic cycle, $Y$, $Z$ disjoint support and homologous to 0. Biextension $\mathsf{B} := H^{2r-1}(\mathsf{P}\smallsetminus Y,Z;\mathbb{Q}(r))$ mixed $\mathbb{Q}_{HS}$ with weights 0,-1,-2 and weight graded $W_{-2}\mathsf{B}=\mathbb{Q}(1)$, $gr^W_{-1}\mathsf{B}=H^{2r-1}(\mathsf{P},\mathbb{Q}(r))$, and $gr^W_0 = \mathbb{Q}(0)$. Degenerate case $gr^W_{-1}\mathsf{B}=(0)$ yields a Kummer extension $0 \to \mathbb{Z}(1) \to \mathsf{B} \to \mathbb{Z}(0)\to 0$. Such a Kummer extension carries a generalized cross-ratio $\lambda(\mathsf{B}) \in \mathbb{C}^*$. Examples and conjectures about generalized cross-ratios will be discussed.

      Speaker: Spencer Bloch (University of Chicago)
    • 5:30 PM 7:00 PM
      Reception 1h 30m
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Height pairings of cycles on modular varieties and L-functions 1h

      The Gross-Zagier formula relates the Neron-Tate height of Heegner divisors to the first central derivative of the L-function of elliptic curves over the rationals. This talk will focus on presenting several generalizations of this formula to higher dimensional modular varieties (often parameterizing abelian varieties with decorations), including conjectures made by Gan-Gross-Prasad, Kudla-Rapoport, and Yifeng Liu, and some recent developments towards them.

      Speaker: Wei Zhang (MIT)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Hypergeometric families and Beilinson’s conjectures 1h

      I will describe the construction of motivic cohomology classes on hypergeometric families of Calabi-Yau 3-folds using Hadamard convolutions. These are analogous to elements of the Mordell-Weil group for families of elliptic curves, and produce solutions to certain inhomogeneous Picard-Fuchs equations. This is part of a joint project with Vasily Golyshev in which we numerically verify Beilinson’s conjectures in some new cases.

      Speaker: Matt Kerr (Washington University, St. Louis)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Stable I-surfaces of index 2 and generalized spin curves of genus 2 1h

      An I-surface (also called a (1,2)-surface) is a complex projective surface with $K^2=1$, $h^2(O)=2$ and ample canonical class. Gorenstein stable I-surfaces are hypersurfaces of degree 10 in $\mathbb{P}(1,1,2,5)$. In order to study stable I-surfaces of index 2 we introduce generalized Gorenstein spin curves, namely pairs $(C,L)$ where $C$ is a Gorenstein curve with ample canonical class and $L$ is a torsion-free rank 1 sheaf on $C$ with $\chi(L)=0$ admitting a generically injective map $L\otimes L\to\omega_C$. We obtain a complete classification of such pairs with C reduced of genus 2 and derive from it the classification of stable I-surfaces of index 2 with a reduced canonical curve.

      Speaker: Rita Pardini (Università di Pisa)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      Atypical Hodge Loci 1h

      In the recent works of a number of people there has emerged a new perspective on Hodge loci. A central result in that development appears in a paper by Baldi, Klinger, and Ullmo*. In this talk, we will explain their result and give a proof. The essential step it to use the integrability conditions associated to a Pfaffian PDE system.

      *Baldi, Gregorio; Klingler, Bruno; Ullmo, Emmanuel. On the distribution of the Hodge locus. Invent. Math. 235 (2024), no. 2, 441–487

      Speaker: Phillip Griffiths (Institute for Advanced Study)
    • 9:30 AM 10:30 AM
      Algebraizability of vector bundles and motivic homotopy theory 1h

      I will outline a program envisioned by Mike Hopkins to prove that all topological vector bundles on certain varieties are algebraizable, and I will report on recent progress on implementing this program. In particular I will explain how to combine convergence theorems of Levine and Bousfield--Kan to construct an unstable Novikov spectral sequence in motivic homotopy theory.

      Speaker: Tom Bachmann (University of Mainz)
    • 10:30 AM 11:00 AM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 11:00 AM 12:00 PM
      Evaluations of areal Mahler measure 1h

      The (logarithmic) Mahler measure of a non-zero rational function $P$ in $n$ variables is defined as the mean of $\log |P|$ (with respect to the normalized arclength measure) restricted to the standard $n$-dimensional unit torus. It has been related to special values of L-functions via regulators.

      Pritsker (2008) defined the areal Mahler measure, which is obtained by replacing the normalized arclength measure on the standard $n$-torus by the normalized area measure on the product of $n$ open unit disks. In this talk, we will investigate some similarities and differences between the two versions of Mahler measure. We will also discuss some evaluations of the areal Mahler measure of multivariable polynomials, which also yields special values of L-functions.

      Speaker: Matilde Lalín (University of Montreal)
    • 12:00 PM 12:15 PM
      Break 15m
    • 12:15 PM 1:15 PM
      Motives, Periods and Species 1h

      The Period Conjecture makes a qualitative prediction about all linear relations between the periods of motives. It is a theorem in the case of 1-motives, e.g. for numbers like logarithms or algebraic numbers or periods of elliptic curves over number fields.

      In joint work with Martin Kalck, we explain how to deduce dimension formulas via the structure theory of finite dimensional algebras over perfect fields.

      Speaker: Annette Huber-Klawitter (University of Freiburg)
    • 1:15 PM 5:00 PM
      Free afternoon 3h 45m
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      A topological formula for the central value of symplectic L-functions and Reidemeister torsion 1h

      We give a global cohomological formula for the central value of the L-function of a symplectic representation on a curve up to squares. It involves a map C. Soule defined in his work on the Lichtenbaum conjectures. The proof relies crucially on a similar formula for the Reidemeister torsion of 3-manifolds. We sketch both analogous arithmetic and topological pictures. This is based on joint work with A. Venkatesh.

      Speaker: Amina Abdurrahman (IHES)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Continuity principle in ramification theory 1h

      One of the goals of ramification theory is to compute the Euler-Poincare characteristic of a given sheaf by using an invariant measuring the ramification.
      Bloch's revolutionary approach to this problem is to measure using CH_0.
      After a long sought, this element of CH_0 had finally been constructed by T. Saito, by constructing the characteristic cycle.
      In the first half of the talk, I'll explain an alternative construction using "continuity principle".
      In the second half, using the continuity principle in another way, I'll give a proof to a conjecture of Serre on the construction of Artin representation in the equal characteristic case.

      Speaker: Tomoyuki Abe (Kavli IPMU)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Unlikely Intersections and applications to Diophantine Geometry 1h

      The Zilber-Pink conjectures on unlikely intersections deal with intersections of subvarieties of a (semi)abelian variety or, more in general, of a Shimura variety, with “special” subvarieties of the ambient space. These conjectures generalize many classical results such as Faltings’ Theorem (Mordell Conjecture), Raynaud’s Theorem (Manin-Mumford Conjecture) and André-Oort Conjecture and have been studied by several authors in the last two decades.

      Most proofs of results in this area follow the well-established Pila-Zannier strategy, first introduced by the two authors in 2008 to give an alternative proof of Raynaud’s theorem as a combination of results coming from o-minimality (Pila-Wilkie’s theorem) with other Diophantine ingredients. The talk will focus on a general introduction to these problems, on some results for semi-abelian varieties and families of abelian varieties, and on applications to other problems of Diophantine nature.

      Speaker: Laura Capuano (Università di Roma III)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m
    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      Sato-Tate groups of Fermat Jacobians 1h

      The arithmetic of abelian varieties is often studied through the lens of their Galois representations. Given an abelian variety $A$ over a number field $K$, an important invariant is the so-called Sato-Tate group $\operatorname{ST}(A)$, a compact Lie group which conjecturally describes the asymptotic distribution of the characteristic polynomials of Frobenius acting on the Tate modules of $A/K$. The group of connected components of $\operatorname{ST}(A)$ has particular arithmetic significance, and there exists a unique minimal extension $L/K$ such that $\operatorname{ST}(A_L)$ is connected. There is currently no general technique to determine $\operatorname{ST}(A)$, nor the extension $L/K$. In this talk I will describe how to compute these two invariants for the Jacobian of the curve $y^2=x^m+1$ by relating them to the cohomology of (several) Fermat hypersurfaces $X_m^n : Y_0^m + \cdots + Y_{n+1}^m=0$. The structure of this cohomology has been studied extensively by Deligne; our application, however, will require a more detailed analysis of the action of the absolute Galois group of $\mathbb{Q}$ on the étale cohomology of $X_m^n$.

      Speaker: Davide Lombardo (Università di Pisa)
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Primes, knots and the scaling site 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      The scaling site (a Grothendieck topos) and its periodic orbits of length log p provide a geometric construction where to interpret the well-known analogy between primes and knots. The role of the maximal abelian cover of the scaling site is played by the adele class space of the rationals. The inverse image of a p-periodic orbit is canonically isomorphic to the mapping torus of the multiplication by the p-Frobenius in the abelianized étale fundamental group of the spectrum of the integers localized at p, thus exhibiting the linking of p with the other rational primes.

      Speaker: Caterina Consani (Johns Hopkins University)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Hyperelliptic Curves mapping to Abelian Surfaces and applications to Beilinson's Conjecture for 0-cycle 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      For a smooth projective variety $X$ over an algebraically closed field $k$ the Chow group of 0-cycles exhibits many similarities with the Picard group of a smooth projective curve. The striking difference is that in higher dimensions the Abel-Jacobi map can be very far from isomorphism. In fact, when k is the field of complex numbers and the variety $X$ has positive geometric genus, the kernel of the Abel-Jacobi map is known to be enormous. On the other extreme, when k is the algebraic closure of the rational numbers a famous conjecture of Beilinson predicts that the Abel-Jacobi is an isomorphism. Apart from the case of curves, there is little to no evidence for this conjecture. In this talk I will present joint work with Jonathan Love where for an abelian surface $A$ we describe a very rich collection of rational equivalences arising from hyperelliptic curves mapping to $A$. Additionally, we show that at least in the case when A is isogenous to a product of two elliptic curves, such hyperelliptic curves are plentiful. Namely, we give a construction that produces for infinitely many values of $g$, infinitely many hyperelliptic curves of genus $g$ mapping birationally to $A$.

      Speaker: Evangelia Gazaki (University of Virginia)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      The spectrum of Artin motives 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      I will present a complete classification of thick tensor ideals in the derived category of Artin motives (in the sense of Voevodsky) over arbitrary fields. This is joint work with Paul Balmer.

      Speaker: Martin Gallauer (University of Warwick)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      On the second Iwasawa cohomology and rational points on elliptic curves 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Speaker: Sujatha Ramdorai (University of British Columbia)
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Brauer and Neron-Severi groups of surfaces over finite fields 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      For a smooth and proper surface over a finite field, the formula of Artin and Tate relates the behavior of the zeta-function at $1$ to other invariants of the surface. We give a refinement which equates invariants only depending on the Brauer group to invariants only depending on the Neron-Severi group. We also give estimates of the terms appearing in the formula. This implies, for example,
      the largest Brauer group of an abelian surface over the field of order $q=p^{2r}$ has order 16q, and the largest Brauer group of a supersingular abelian surface over a prime field is 36.

      Speaker: Thomas Geisser (Rikkyo University)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Nori connectivity for squared hypersurfaces and classicality of the motivic Galois group 1h

      Let $X$ be a smooth and projective variety of dimension $n+1$ and let $f\colon \mathcal{Y} \to S$ be the universal family of smooth hypersurfaces in $X$ of a fixed degree. Assuming that the degree is sufficiently large, Nori proved that the cohomology of the base change $\mathcal{Y}\times_S T$ of $\mathcal{Y}$ along a smooth morphism $T\to S$ coincides with the cohomology of $X\times T$ up to degree $2n-1$. In particular, this gives a simple way to compute the cohomology of the local system $(R^n f_*\mathbb{Q})_{\mathsf{prim}}$ up to degree $n-1$, and after base change by any smooth morphism.

      We propose a version of Nori's theorem for the self product $\mathcal{Y}\times_S \mathcal{Y}$ of the universal family. This will yield information on the higher endomorphisms of the local system $(R^nf_*\mathbb{Q})_{\mathsf{prim}}$. We hope to use these endomorphisms to rule out the existence of positive degree operations on rational Betti cohomology and hence proving that the motivic Galois group is classical.

      Speaker: Joseph Ayoub (University of Zurich)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Explicit constructions of motivic Galois Groups 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      This talk is based on the joint work with Guangyu Zhu.

      The category of $\mathbb{Q}$-mixed Hodge-Tate structures is canonically equivalent to the category of graded comodules over a graded commutative Hopf algebra $H$ over $\mathbb{Q}$. The $H$ is isomorphic to the tensor algebra of the direct sum over $n>0$ of $\mathbb{C}/\mathbb{Q}(n)$, placed in the degree $n$, with the shuffle product. However this isomorphism is not natural, and does not work in families. We give a natural explicit construction of the Hopf algebra $H$.

      Generalizing this, we define a Hopf dg-algebra describing a dg-model of the derived category of variations of Hodge-Tate structures on a complex manifold $X$. Its cobar complex is a dg-model for the rational Deligne cohomology of $X$.

      The main application is explicit construction of regulators. We define refined periods. They are single-valued, and take values in the tensor product of $\mathbb{C}^*$ and $n-1$ copies of $\mathbb{C}$. We also consider a p-adic variant of the construction.

      Speaker: Alexander Goncharov (Yale University)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      Enriched Hodge structures and cycles on analytic thickenings 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      This talk is a report on an ongoing project with Madhav Nori and Deepam Patel. We consider triples (X, A, B) where X is a complex analytic space, A, B are closed analytic subspaces such that A is a proper algebraic variety, and X \ B is a complex manifold, and A \ B is a submanifold. We view this as defining a representative of a germ of an analytic neighbourhood of A (the “thickening” of A). If ι : A → X and j : X \ B → X are the inclusions, we may consider cohomology groups H^m(A, ι^(−1)Rj∗Z) (and Tate twists). Our goal is to define a variant of Deligne-Beilinson cohomology for such objects, using Enriched Hodge structures (Bloch-Srinivas), which are “enhanced” versions of Mixed Hodge structures. We expect that our “Enriched D-B Cohomologies” would be the targets of regulators defined on suitable K-groups associated to such germs, and these would detect interesting elements in the K-theory of the germs. An example is when X is a small ball around A = {0} in Cn, and B = ∅, which corresponds to the K-groups of the ring of convergent power series in n complex variables; here the underlying MHS has no information, while the “enriched” version has content. In this talk, we will indicate how the EHS’s are constructed, what the corresponding Enriched DB-cohomology looks like, and discuss some simple examples.

      Speaker: Vasudevan Srinivas (University at Buffalo)
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Framed height pairing 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      In abstract Hodge theory, Deligne's splitting measures how far a mixed Hodge structure is from being real split. An allied notion, developed by S. Bloch, R.Hain et al. , is that of a height for a special class of mixed Hodge structures called Biextensions. The notion is Biextension is closely related to algebraic cycles homologous to zero. Given two such cycles in complimentary codimensions in an ambient smooth and projective variety, a certain cohomology group associated to the pair gives an example of a Biextension mixed Hodge structure. The height associated to such a Biextension is exactly same as the archimedean component of the height pairing of the two cycles developed by Bloch and Beilinson. In a previous paper (https://doi.org/10.1112/plms.12443), along with J.I.Burgos Gil and G. Pearlstein, the speaker defined the notion of height for oriented mixed Hodge structures. These mixed Hodge structures arises out of Bloch's higher cycles in complimentary codimensions, and is more complicated than the Biextensions.

      Speaker: Souvik Goswami (University of Barcelona)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      Relative rigid cohomology via motivic homotopy theory 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      We show how the language of motivic non-archimedean homotopy theory can be used to define p-adic cohomology theories and prove new results about them. For example, we show how to define solid relative rigid cohomology and prove a version of Berthelot's conjecture for it (joint work with V. Ertl), and how to construct Hyodo-Kato cohomology, together with its associated Clemens-Schmid chain complex, bypassing log-geometry (joint work with F. Binda and M. Gallauer).

      Speaker: Alberto Vezzani (Università Statale di Milano)
    • 12:30 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch 2h
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      Regulators and derivatives of Vologodsky integrals with respect to log(p) 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Often, p-adic regulators for varieties with good reduction can be computed in terms of Coleman integrals. In the bad reduction case one gets meaningful results by replacing Coleman integrals with Vologodsky integrals. These integrals depend on a choice of the branch of the p-adic logarithm, determined by a choice of log(p). In this talk, partially based on joint work with J. Mueller and P. Srinivasan, I will explain why the derivative of the regulator with respect to the branch parameter log(p) is an interesting "discrete regulator" and how it may be computed in terms of derivatives of Vologodsky functions with respect to log(p). Several examples, some of which are conjectural, will be discussed: p-adic heights, non-abelian p-adic Albanese maps, and syntomic regulators.

      Speaker: Amnon Besser (Ben Gurion University)
    • 3:30 PM 4:00 PM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 4:00 PM 5:00 PM
      Depth reduction for multiple polylogarithms 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      The special values of the Dedekind zeta function of a number field F at integer argument n should, according to Zagier's Polylogarithm Conjecture, be expressed via a determinant of F-values of the n-th polylogarithm function. Goncharov laid out a vast program incorporating this conjecture using properties of multiple polylogarithms and the structure of a motivic Lie coalgebra. This led him to formulate his Depth Conjecture and a new strategy for solving the one given by Zagier. We report on progress in this direction since Regulators IV, some in joint work with, or developed by, S.Charlton, D.Radchenko as well as D.Rudenko and his collaborators.

      Speaker: Herbert Gangl (Durham University)
    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      On relative singular support in mixed characteristic 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      The notion of micro support in mixed characteristic is formulated using the Frobenius--Witt cotangent bundle but the existence of the singular support is not yet known. We introduce a relative notion of micro support over a fixed regular scheme S and prove the existence of a saturation of the relative singular support on smooth schemes over S. The proof is a variation of that by Beilinson using the Radon transform.

      Speaker: Takeshi Saito (University of Tokyo)
    • 11:00 AM 11:30 AM
      Coffee break 30m Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

    • 11:30 AM 12:30 PM
      A quadratically enriched logarithmic zeta function 1h Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      Aula magna di Scienze area Pontecorvo

      André Weil proposed a beautiful connection between algebraic topology and the number of solutions to equations over finite fields in a celebrated paper from 1948: the zeta function of a variety over a finite field is simultaneously a generating function for the number of solutions to its defining equations and a product of characteristic polynomials of endomorphisms of cohomology groups. The ranks of these cohomology groups are the Betti numbers of the associated complex manifold. We enrich the logarithmic derivative of the zeta function to a power series with coefficients in the Grothendieck--Witt group of stable isomorphism classes of unimodular modular forms, using traces of powers of Frobenius in A1-homotopy theory. We show the quadratically enriched logarithmic zeta function to be connected to the Betti numbers of the associated real manifold under certain hypotheses. This is joint work with Margaret Bilu, Wei Ho, Padma Srinivasan, and Isabel Vogt and joint work in progress with Tom Bachmann.

      Speaker: Kirsten Wickelgren (Duke University)
    • 3:00 PM 4:00 PM
      Bonus talk: The affine Grassmannian as a presheaf quotient 1h Aula Magna di Scienze, area Pontecorvo

      Aula Magna di Scienze, area Pontecorvo

      The affine Grassmannian of a reductive group G is usually defined as the étale sheafification of the quotient of the loop group LG by the positive loop subgroup. I will discuss various triviality results for G-torsors which imply that this sheafification is often not necessary.

      Speaker: Kestutis Cesnavicius (Orsay)