Mini-workshop: superpotentials in algebra and geometry. Abstracts from the mini-workshop held February 23--29, 2020 (Q2660444)
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English | Mini-workshop: superpotentials in algebra and geometry. Abstracts from the mini-workshop held February 23--29, 2020 |
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Mini-workshop: superpotentials in algebra and geometry. Abstracts from the mini-workshop held February 23--29, 2020 (English)
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30 March 2021
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Summary: Mirror symmetry has been at the epicenter of many mathematical discoveries in the past twenty years. It was discovered by physicists in the setting of super conformal field theories (SCFTs) associated to closed string theory, mathematically described by \(\sigma\)-models. These \(\sigma\)-models turn out in two different ways: the A-model and the B-model. Physical considerations predict that deformations of the SCFT of either \(\sigma\)-model should be isomorphic. Thus the mirror symmetry conjecture states that the A-model of a particular Calabi-Yau space \(X\) must be isomorphic to the B-model of its mirror \(\check{X}\). Mirror symmetry has been extended beyond the Calabi-Yau setting, in particular to Fano varieties, using the so called Landau-Ginzburg models. That is a non-compact manifold equipped with a complex valued function called the \textit{superpotential}. In general, there is no clear recipe to construct the mirror for a given variety which demonstrates the need of joining mathematical forces from a wide range. The main aim of this Mini-Workshop was to bring together experts from the different communities (such as symplectic geometry and topology, the theory of cluster varieties, Lie theory and algebraic combinatorics) and to share the state of the art on superpotentials and explore connections between different constructions.
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