Ramification Theory for Henselian Valued Fields

Vaidehee Thatte (King's College London)

04-Oct-2024, 07:00-08:00 (14 months ago)

Abstract: Ramification theory serves the dual purpose of a diagnostic tool and treatment by helping us locate, measure, and treat the anomalous behavior of mathematical objects. In the classical setup, the degree of a finite Galois extension of "nice" fields splits up neatly into the product of two well-understood numbers (ramification index and inertia degree) that encode how the base field changes. In the general case, however, a third factor called the defect (or ramification deficiency) can pop up. The defect is a mysterious phenomenon and the main obstruction to several long-standing open problems, such as obtaining resolution of singularities. The primary reason is, roughly speaking, that the classical strategy of "objects become nicer after finitely many adjustments" fails when the defect is non-trivial. I will discuss my previous and ongoing work in ramification theory that allows us to understand and treat the defect.

number theory

Audience: researchers in the topic


Kyushu University Algebra Seminar

Series comments: We hold the seminar once a month but most are conducted in Japanese. I will add here the ones in English.

Organizers: Shinichi Kobayashi, Kentaro Nakamura, Ade Irma Suriajaya*, Toshiki Matsusaka, Norihiro Hanihara
*contact for this listing

Export talk to