Room 209, School of Arts and Sciences
Central Campus
The Problem of colouring graphs goes back to De Morgan, who also conjectured the famous Four Colour Theorem, proved by Appel and Haken in 1976 with the aid of a computer. However, the theorem has so far defied any theoretical attempt to prove it. Interpreting the four-colour theorem as the colouring of trivalent dual graphs, Penrose suggested an alternative point of view that was developed later by Baldridge and McCarty in the language of categorification and topological quantum field theory. However, from the speaker’s point of view, a significant step was taken by Kronheimer and Mrowka, who used gauge theory to reformulate the idea of Tait-Colouring. The Conjecture made by them led Khovanov, Robert, and Wagner to pursue the colouring problem using foam evaluation. This later work and the work of Baldridge inspired the author to look at it from another very different perspective of topological defects, the subject that is tied with the concept of generalised symmetry in QFT (Runkel, Del-Zetto, etc). This talk is going to be a review of these approaches, and I intend to keep it colloquium style.
Amit Kumar is currently a postdoctoral fellow at ICTS in the group Geometry and Physical Mathematics. He completed his PhD from Louisiana State University with a focus on Gauge Theory (Scott Baldridge) and Representation Theory (Mikhail Khovanov and Anton Zeitlin). Most of his interests lie in the overlap of Geometry and Physics. Other than that, he is also very interested in the applications, which include topological complexity of motion planning and Geometric Deep Learning.