NEW PERSPECTIVES

ON SYZ MIRROR SYMMETRY

Imperial College London

The workshop is postponed due to the COVID-19 epidemic

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, we decided to postpone the event. We apologize for all the inconvenience that this decision might cause. We are confident that it will be possible to reschedule the workshop to a later date. We will discuss this and make new plans without any hurry, and will then inform you.

The workshop provides an international forum for recent advances in mirror symmetry, with an emphasis on the celebrated SYZ conjecture. Various approaches to this conjecture, based on algebraic, symplectic and non-archimedean geometry, will be presented. Along with more focused research-oriented talks, there will be special talks aimed at establishing links among different points of view .

Speakers

Sébastien Boucksom - École Polytechnique, Paris

Pierrick Bousseau - ETH, Zürich

Mark Gross - Cambridge

Tamas Hausel - IST Austria

Anne-Sophie Kaloghiros - Brunel

Alexander Kasprzyk - Nottingham

Johannes Nicaise - Imperial College, London

Thomas Prince - Oxford

Konstanze Rietsch - King’s College, London

Giulia Saccà - Columbia, USA

Ivan Smith - Cambridge

Dimitri Wyss - EPF, Lausanne

Tony Yue Yu - Paris Sud

Organisers

Hülya Argüz - Versailles-Paris Saclay

Tom Coates - Imperial College, London

Mirko Mauri - MPIM, Bonn

Enrica Mazzon - MPIM, Bonn

Scientific committee

Alessio Corti - Imperial College, London

Ailsa Keating - Cambridge

Bernd Siebert - Austin, USA

Richard Thomas - Imperial College, London

Contact

imperial[dot]syz[at]gmail[dot]com

We gratefully acknowledge funding and support from Heilbronn Institute for Mathematical Research, the London Mathematical Society and Foundation Compositio Mathematica. This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement N. 682603, and from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under the standard grant Mirror symmetry, Berkovich spaces and the Minimal Model Programme.