305 lines
13 KiB
TeX
305 lines
13 KiB
TeX
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\title{Application for a Workshop on Complex Analysis}
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\author{Eleonora Di Nezza, Stefan Kebekus, Mihai Păun, Stefan Schreieder}
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\makeatletter
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\hypersetup{
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pdfauthor={Eleonora Di Nezza, Stefan Kebekus, Mihai Păun, Stefan Schreieder},
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\begin{document}
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\maketitle
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\section{Description of the Workshop}
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% Topology of Kähler spaces: D-modules, perverse sheaves, Hodge modules
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%- Singularities and Hodge ideals etc: Mustata-Popa, Park, Ruijie Yang, Schnell
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%- Lagrangian fibrations: Maulik-Shen, Shen-Yin, Schnell, Bakker
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%- Singer-Hopf conjecture and fundamental groups of Kaehler manifolds: Arapura, Botong Wang, Maxim, Llosa-Isenrich—Py.
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\subsection{Topology of Kähler spaces: D-modules, perverse sheaves, Hodge modules}
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Over the last decade, Saito's theory of Hodge modules has seen spectacular
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applications in birational geometry. More recent developments, which are of
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significant importance, connect the theory to singularity theory, commutative
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algebra, and the topology of algebraic varieties. The following topics in this
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area will particularly interest our workshop.
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\subsubsection{Singularities and Hodge Ideals}
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In a series of influential papers starting with \cite{MR4081135}, Mustaţă and
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Popa used Hodge modules to refine and generalize well-known invariants of
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singularities, most notably the multiplier ideals used in analysis and algebraic
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geometry. Schnell and Yang’s recent preprint \cite{arXiv:2309.16763} suggested
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an alternative approach toward similar ends. The first applications pertain to
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Bernstein--Sato polynomials and their zero sets; these are essential invariants
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of singularities originating from commutative algebra that are hard to compute.
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Schnell and Yang apply their results to conjectures of
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Debarre--Casalaina-Martin--Grushevsky concerning the Riemann--Schottky problem
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and the singularities of Theta divisors of principally polarized Abelian
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varieties.
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Park and Popa recently applied perverse sheaves and D-module theory to improve
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Goresky--MacPherson's classic Lefschetz theorems in the singular setting. A
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program put forward by Friedman--Laza aims at understanding the Hodge structures
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of degenerating Calabi--Yau varieties.
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\subsubsection{Lagrangian fibrations}
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A Lagrangian fibration of a hyperkähler manifold $M$ is a proper holomorphic map
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$f : M \to B$ whose generic fibers are Langrangian.
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\paragraph{Compact Setting}
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If $M$ is compact, a well-known conjecture in the field predicts that $B$ is
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projective space. In the case where $B$ is smooth, Hwang established the
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conjecture more than 16 years ago in a celebrated paper. There is new insight
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today, as Bakker--Schnell recently found a purely Hodge theoretic proof of
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Hwang's result in \cite{arXiv:2311.08977}. Hopefully, these methods will give
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insight into the singular setting, which remains open to date.
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\paragraph{Non-compact Setting}
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Geometers study Lagrangian fibrations over non-compact bases in the framework of
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the ``$P=W$ conjecture,'' which Maulik--Shen and Hausel--Mellit--Minets--Schiffmann
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have recently proved \cite{arXiv:2209.02568, arXiv:2209.05429}. In the same
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setting, Shen–Yin discovered a remarkable symmetry of certain pushforward
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sheaves and conjectured that more general symmetries exist. Schnell has recently
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established these conjectures in \cite{arXiv:2303.05364} and also proved two
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conjectures of Maulik–Shen–Yin on the behavior of certain perverse sheaves near
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singular fibers.
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\subsubsection{Singer--Hopf conjecture and fundamental groups of Kähler manifolds}
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The Singer-Hopf conjecture asserts that a closed aspherical manifold of real
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dimension $2n$ has positive signed Euler characteristic, $(-1)^n \cdot
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\chi(X)\geq 0$. This conjecture goes back to 1931 when Hopf formulated a related
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version for Riemannian manifolds. Recently, Arapura–Maxim–Wang suggested
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Hodge-theoretic refinements of this conjecture for Kähler manifolds in
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\cite{arXiv:2310.14131}. While the methods of \cite{arXiv:2310.14131} suffice to
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show particular cases, the statement remains open in full generality.
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In a related direction, Llosa-Isenrich--Py found an application of complex
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geometry and Hodge theory to geometric group theory, settling an old question of
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Brady on the finiteness properties of groups \cite{zbMATH07790946}. As a
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byproduct, the authors also obtain a proof of the classical Singer conjecture in
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an essential particular case in the realm of Kähler manifolds.
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Our goal in this workshop is to bring together several experts in geometric
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group theory with experts on Hodge theory and to explore further potential
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applications of the methods from one field to problems in the other.
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\subsection{Canonical Metrics and Hyperbolicity}
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\subsubsection{Kähler--Einstein Metrics with Conic Singularities and Their Limits}
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In the proof of the Donaldson--Tian--Yau conjecture, which Chen--Donaldson--Sun
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gave in a series of papers around 2015, Kähler--Einstein metrics with conic
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singularities along a smooth divisor emerged to play a vital role. Since then,
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these metrics have become an object of study in their own right. The work of
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Brendle, Donaldson, Guenancia, Rubinstein, and many others provides a complete
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package of results that generalize Yau's celebrated solution of the Calabi
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conjecture to the conic setting. Today, many exciting recent developments in
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this field gravitate around the following general question.
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\begin{q}
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Let $X$ be a projective manifold, and let $D\subset $ be a non-singular
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divisor. Assume that for every sufficiently small angle $0< \beta << 1$,
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there exists a unique Kähler--Einstein metric $\omega_\beta$ with conic
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singularities of angle $2\pi\beta$ along $D$. In other words, assume that
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\[
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Ricci_{\omega_\beta}= \lambda \cdot \omega_{\beta}+ (1-\beta)\cdot [D],
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\quad
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\text{where } \lambda \in \{ \pm 1\}.
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\]
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Is there a meaningful limit of $\omega_\beta$ as $\beta\to 0$, perhaps after
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rescaling?
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\end{q}
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Starting with \cite{zbMATH07615186}, a series of articles by Biquard--Guenancia
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settles many relevant (and technically challenging!) particular cases of this
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question.
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\begin{itemize}
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\item If $(X,D)$ is the toroidal compactification of a ball quotient, then the
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limit of the metric exists and equals the hyperbolic metric.
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\item If $X$ is Fano and $D$ is a divisor whose class is proportional to the
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anticanonical class, then the limit of the rescaled metric exists and equals
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the Tian--Yau metric.
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\end{itemize}
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More work is ongoing, and we expect to report on substantial progress by the
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time our workshop takes place.
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\subsubsection{Kähler--Einstein Metrics on Singular Spaces}
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Motivated by progress in the Minimal Model Program, there has been increasing
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interest in Kähler--Einstein metrics on singular spaces. While one of the first
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results in this direction dates back to the early 1970s when Kobayashi
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constructed orbifold Kähler--Einstein metrics, a definitive existence result for
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a relevant class of singularities was obtained by Eyssidieux--Guedj--Zeriahi
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about 15 years ago in \cite{zbMATH05859416}, by combining Yau's technique with
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Kolodziej's $\mathcal C^0$ estimates. Much more recently, Li--Tian--Wang
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extended Chen-Donaldson-Sun's solution of the Yau--Tian--Donaldson conjecture to
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general $\mathbb Q$-Fano varieties \cite{zbMATH07382001, zbMATH07597119}.
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For most applications, it is essential to control the geometry of these metrics
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near the singularities. Despite the problem's obvious importance, little is
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known so far. The continuity of the metric's potential has been established
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quite recently in the preprint \cite{arXiv:2401.03935} of Cho--Choi. Beyond
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that, the main progress in this direction is due to Hein--Sun
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\cite{zbMATH06827885}, who showed that near a large class of smoothable isolated
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singularities that are locally isomorphic to a Calabi-Yau cone, the singular
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Calabi-Yau metric must be asymptotic in a strong sense to the Calabi-Yau cone
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metric. Using the bounded geometry method, Datar--Fu--Song recently showed an
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analogous result in the case of isolated log canonical singularities
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\cite{zbMATH07669617}. Fu–Hein–Jiang obtained precise asymptotics shortly
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after, \cite{zbMATH07782497}. Essential contributions directly connected to
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these topics are due to Chiu, Delcroix, Hein, C.~Li, Y.~Li, Sun, Székelyhidi,
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Tosatti, and Zhang.
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\bigskip
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{\color{red}\textbf --- DO NOT READ ANYTHING BELOW THIS LINE ---}
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\subsubsection{Complex hyperbolicity}
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The Green-Griffiths conjecture (concerning the Zariski closure of holomorphic
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entire curves or more generally, of families of holomorphic disks on varieties
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of general type) continues to keep busy many complex geometers. Probably the
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most complete result in this field is due to A. Bloch (more than 100 years ago),
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who -in modern language- showed that the Zariski closure of a map $\varphi:
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\mathbb C \to A$ to a complex tori $A$ is the translate of a sub-tori. A decade
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ago, K.~Yamanoi established the Green-Griffiths conjecture for projective
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manifolds general type, which admit a generically finite map into an Abelian
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variety. This represents a very nice generalization of Bloch's theorem.
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In the last couple of years the field is taking a very interesting direction, by
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combining techniques from Hodge theory with the familiar Nevanlinna theory and
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jet differentials, cf. the articles by D. Brotbek, Y. Deng, Y. Brunebarbe, B.
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Cadorel and A. Javanpeykar.
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Using recent advances in the theory of harmonic maps (due to
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Daskalopoulos-Mese), Y. Deng and K. Yamanoi were able to confirm the
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Green-Griffiths conjecture for manifolds whose fundamental group admits a
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representation having certain natural properties (echoing the case of curves of
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genus at least two).
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Techniques from birational geometry, in connection with the work of F.~Campana
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are also present in the field via the -long awaited- work of E. Rousseau and its
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collaborators.
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\subsubsection{Complex hyperbolicity. Mark II}
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The 1979 Green-Griffiths-Lang conjecture asserts that every complex-projective
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variety $X$ of general type contains a proper subvariety $Y \subsetneq X$, such
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that every non-constant entire holomorphic curve $\mathbb C \to X$ takes its
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values in $Y$. Its beginnings date back to 1926, when André Bloch showed that
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the Zariski closure of entire holomorphic curve $\varphi: \mathbb C \to A$ to a
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complex torus $A$ is the translate of a sub-torus. Today, the conjecture still
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drives much of the research in complex geometry. We highlight several advances
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that will be relevant for our workshop.
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\paragraph{Hypersurfaces in projective space}
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A remarkable paper of Bérczi and Kirwan, \cite{MR4688701} published in September
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last year, establishes hyperbolicity and proves the Green-Griffiths-Lang for
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generic hypersurfaces of the projective space, $X \subsetneq \mathbb P^n$,
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provided that the degree of $X$ is larger than an explicit polynomial in $n$.
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These are significant improvements of earlier degree bounds, which involve
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non-polynomial bounds of order $(\sqrt{n} \log n)^n$ or worse. The proof builds
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on a strategy of Diverio-Merker-Rousseau and combines non-reductive geometric
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invariant theory with the ``Grassmannian techniques'' of Riedl-Yang. A very
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recent preprint of Cadorel simplifies the proof Bérczi-Kirwan substantially, but
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still needs to undergo peer review, \cite{arXiv:2406.19003}.
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\paragraph{Hyperbolicity and representations of fundamental groups}
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Using recent advances in the theory of harmonic maps (due to
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Daskalopoulos-Mese), Y. Deng and K. Yamanoi were able to confirm the
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Green-Griffiths conjecture for manifolds whose fundamental group admits a
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representation having certain natural properties (echoing the case of curves of
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genus at least two).
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\paragraph{Material collections}
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In the last couple of years the field is taking a very interesting direction, by
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combining techniques from Hodge theory with the familiar Nevanlinna theory and
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jet differentials, cf. the articles by D. Brotbek, Y. Deng, Y. Brunebarbe, B.
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Cadorel and A. Javanpeykar.
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\bibstyle{alpha}
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\bibliographystyle{alpha}
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\bibliography{general}
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\end{document}
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