A non-archimedean definable Chow theorem.
Abhishek Oswal (University of Toronto)
Abstract: O-minimality has had some striking applications to number theory. The utility of o-minimal structures originates from the remarkably tame topological properties satisfied by sets definable in such structures. Despite the rigidity that it imposes, the theory is sufficiently flexible to allow for a range of analytic constructions. An illustration of this `tame' property is the following surprising generalization of Chow's theorem proved by Peterzil and Starchenko - A closed analytic subset of a complex algebraic variety that is also definable in an o-minimal structure, is in fact algebraic. While the o-minimal machinery aims to capture the archimedean order topology of the real line, it is natural to wonder if such a machinery can be set up over non-archimedean fields. In this talk, we explore a non-archimedean analogue of an o-minimal structure and describe a version of the definable Chow theorem in this context.
algebraic geometrynumber theory
Audience: researchers in the topic
Series comments: Please visit the seminar series homepage for streaming details. Timings of the seminar vary from week to week.
| Organizers: | Krishna Hanumanthu*, T. R. Ramadas* |
| *contact for this listing |
