Math 662: A tapas of algebra, geometry, and combinatorics
Instructor
Hal Schenck
620B Blocker
schenck@math.tamu.edu
http://www.math.tamu.edu/~schenck/VIGRE.html
Students Enrolled
Jenny Gilmore (undergrad) and Xianjin Chen, Marvin Decker, Scott Evans,
Larry Holifield, Lanvaya Kannan, Youngdeug Ko, Vince Lemoine,
Rober Main, Roel Morales, Jody Wilson and Zhigang Zhang (graduate students).
Course Description
The interplay between algebra and geometry is a beautiful (and fun!)
area of mathematical investigation. Advances in computing and algorithms
over the last quarter century have revolutionized the area, making
many (formerly inaccessable) problems tractable, and providing a fertile
ground for experimentation and conjecture. We'll begin by studying
some basic commutative algebra and connections to geometry; i.e. rings,
and ideals, varieties, the Hilbert basis theorem and nullstellensatz.
Then we'll discuss graded objects and varieties in projective space;
the Hilbert syzygy theorem says (basically) we can approximate a graded
module with a finite sequence of free modules (a finite free resolution).
The Grobner basis algorithm (which we'll study) actually lets us
compute these things; and so we have a great source of examples.
The real objective of the course is to bring whatever we choose to study
next to life by doing lots of examples. We really will take a tapas
approach, studying homological algebra (free resolutions,
Tor and Ext, Hilbert syzygy theorem), algebraic combinatorics and
algebraic topology (simplicial homology, Stanley-Reisner rings, upper
bound theorem, applications to polytopes and discrete geometry); and
classical algebraic geometry (the geometry of points and curves in
projective space).