Geometry
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The Geometry Group of the Mathematics Department at UCSB has Differential Geometry as its core part, and
includes two important related fields:
Mathematical Physics, and part of Algebraic Geometry in the department.
The core part, Differential Geometry, covers Riemannian Geometry, Global
Analysis and Geometric Analysis. A central topic in Riemannian geometry is
the interplay between curvature and topology of Riemannian manifolds and
spaces. A well-known example is the classical Bonnet-Myers theorem which
states that a complete Riemannian manifold of uniformly positive Ricci curvature must be compact and
have a finite fundamental group. Global analysis,
on the other hand, studies analytic structures on manifolds and explores
their relations with geometric and topological invariants. For example, the
celebrated Atiyah-Singer index theorem establishes the relation between the
index of elliptic operators-an analytic quantity, and characteristic classes of
the underlying manifold which are topological invariants. Finally, geometric
analysis combines geometric tools with analytic tools such as PDE, geometric
measure theory and functional analysis in geometric contexts to study geometric and topological problems
which are often nonlinear. An important
example is Hamilton's Ricci flow. Recently, spectacular results in geometry
and topology were achieved by employing the Ricci flow. These include
Perelman's seminal work on the Poincare Conjecture and the Geometrization
Conjecture for 3-manifolds. The research of the Geometry Group covers diverse topics in Riemannian
geometry, Global analysis and Geometric
Analysis, such as manifolds with lower bounds on the Ricci curvature, minimal surfaces in Riemannian
manifolds, Einstein manifolds, the index theory
and the eta invariants, Ricci flow, pseudo-holomorphic curves in symplectic
geometry, and Seiberg-Witten invariants in the theory of the topology of
4-dimensional manifolds.
The research of the Geometry Group in Mathematical Physics covers various topics such as knot and link
homologies, gauge theory, Chern-Simons theory, Calabi-Yau spaces, D-branes, mirror symmetry, the
positive mass theorem in general relativity, and constant mean curvature foliations on asymptotically
flat manifolds.
The research of the Geometry Group in Algebraic Geometry covers various topics such as mirror symmetry,
Calabi-Yau spaces, the minimal models,
moduli spaces, and the Kahler-Ricci flow.
Interactions between the various directions of Riemannian Geometry,
Global Analysis, Geometric Analysis, Mathemtical Physics and Algebraic
Geometry play an important role in the research of the Geometric Group. Interactions with other groups
of the Mathematics Department, the Physics
Department and KITP play an equally important role.
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Faculty
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