Welcome to the Geometry and Topology Group, part of the Department of Mathematics at University College London. Our research interests range from geometric topology and geometric group theory, through algebraic geometry and symplectic topology to differential geometry, geometric analysis, and mathematical physics.
The Geometry and Topology Seminar meets every week at 14:00 on Wednesday in room 707 on the 7th floor of the Department of Mathematics (unless said otherwise, see the calendar).
Other seminars:
Costante Bellettini works in geometric analysis, with special emphasis on regularity questions arising in the calculus of variations and in calibrated geometry, often using methods from geometric measure theory and partial differential equations. He is particularly interested in the impact of such regularity results on questions arising in differential geometry.
Dario Beraldo works in geometric representation theory, especially on the geometric Langlands program. His other interests include derived algebraic geometry, higher category theory, connections to number theory and to mathematical physics.
Aleksander Doan works in differential geometry and symplectic topology. He is particularly interested in the partial differential equations of gauge theory and their relation to enumerative invariants of manifolds with special holonomy, such as Calabi-Yau manifolds.
Jeffrey Galkowski works in microlocal analysis with an emphasis on high frequency spectral and scattering theory problems motivated by mathematical physics. Typically, these problems are posed on non-trivial manifolds where the underlying geometry plays a crucial role.
Selim Ghazouani’s work is about deformation spaces of geometric structures on manifolds. More specifically, he has worked on moduli spaces of structures on surfaces, complex hyperbolic geometry, and Lorentzian geometry. He also applies geometric techniques to rigidity questions in dynamical systems.
Francis Johnson works in topology of manifolds; low-dimensional topology; the D(2) problem, more generally problems involving the fundamental group; Lie groups and their discrete subgroups; homological algebra; geometric invariant theory.
Mikhail Karpukhin works in geometric analysis. He is primarily interested in harmonic maps, minimal surfaces, and their connection to optimization problems for eigenvalues of elliptic operators.
Lars Louder works in geometric group theory and low-dimensional topology, primarily free groups and limit groups.
Yusra Naqvi works in geometric group theory and is especially interested in Coxeter groups, Chevalley groups, and buildings. She also works in algebraic combinatorics.
Ruth Reynolds works in noncommutative ring theory, algebraic geometry, and their interactions. Recently, her interests include the behaviour of idealizers, a subring of a noncommutative ring, which often exhibit interesting and pathological behaviour.
Ed Segal works in algebraic geometry and homological algebra, with a lot of inspiration from theoretical physics. His interests include derived categories, matrix factorizations, non-commutative resolutions, and topological field theories (mainly the B-model).
Michael Singer has various research interests in differential geometry. He is currently working on projects in Kaehler geometry, hyperKaehler and anti-self-dual Einstein metrics in four dimensions, and moduli spaces arising in mathematical physics (in particular, Euclidean monopoles).
Stephane Geudens is an IMSS fellow working in Poisson geometry and related areas. His current research deals with deformation problems and rigidity phenomena in this context.
Marcello Malagutti works in harmonic analysis, geometrical analysis of PDEs, microlocal analysis, spectral analysis, and scattering theory as well as quantum field theory and quantum mechanics.
Our department has a thriving community of PhD students. For information about PhD studies, including available funding opportunities, visit this page. In addition, we are part of the London School of Geometry and Number Theory, a joint PhD program between King's College, Imperial College, and UCL.
For general enquiries see the department contact information and key contacts. If you have any questions or comments about the seminar or this website email Aleksander Doan.
How to find us
6th floor, 25 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AY