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Iskovskikh Seminar
September 26, 2019 18:00, Moscow, Steklov Mathematical Institute, room 530
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Bogomolov’s decomposition theorem
V. K. Rogov |
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Abstract:
For decades (complex) algebraic geometry and (complex) differential
geometry had being going going side-by-side in studying more or less
the same objects. In spite of the difference between motivations,
definitions and methods that they’re using, the results obtained by
one of these branches often turned out to be valuable in another.
One of the examples illustrating this principle is given by the
Bogomolov’s decomposition theorem, which states that any compact
Kähler manifold with trivial canonical class can, after passing to a
finite covering, be splitted as a direct product of a complex torus, a
number of simple Calabi–Yau manifolds and a number of irreducible
holomorphically symplectic manifolds.
The original proof is based on a collection of deep theorems from
differential and Riemannian geometry.
I am going to show the context, in which Calabi–Yau manifolds arise in
Riemannian geometry (“Berger’s list of irreducible holonomies”),
provide a connection between differential geometric and
algebro-geometric definitions of Calabi–Yau manifolds and explain
how to deduce the proof of Bogomolov’s decomposition theorem using
different differential geometric tools: Calabi–Yau theorem,
Cheeger–Gromoll splitting theorem, Bochner’s principle etc.
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