Séminaire Géométries ICJ
The Lagrangian capacity of symplectic manifolds
par
→
Europe/Paris
112 (ICJ)
112
ICJ
1er étage bâtiment Braconnier, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 - La Doua
Description
A symplectic capacity is a function that assigns to each symplectic manifold a nonnegative number, which roughly measures its “symplectic size” and is invariant under symplectomorphisms (sympletic equivalence). An important example is the Lagrangian capacity: for a Lagrangian submanifold $L$ in a symplectic manifold, the minimal symplectic area of $L$ is defined as the smallest positive symplectic area of a smooth $2$-disk with boundary on $L$. The Lagrangian capacity of the symplectic manifold is then the supremum of these minimal areas taken over all embedded Lagrangian tori.
In this talk, I will describe problems related to the Lagrangian capacity and present some of our recent progress on this topic.