Tel-Aviv University
School of Mathematical Sciences
Department Colloquium
Monday, December 21, 2015
Schreiber 006, 12:15
Yakov Eliashberg
Stanford
History and classical methods of the h-principle
Abstract: In geometry and
topology, as well as in applications of Mathematics to Physics and
other areas, one often deals with systems of partial differential
equations and inequalities. By replacing derivatives of unknown
functions by independent functions one gets a system of algebraic
equations and inequalities. The solvability of this algebraic system is
necessary for the solvability of the original system of differential
equations. It was a surprising discovery in the 1950-60s that there are
geometrically interesting classes of systems for which this necessary
condition is also sufficient. This led to counter-intuitive results,
like Steven Smale’s famous inside-out “eversion” of the 2-sphere and
John Nash’s isometric embedding of the unit sphere into a ball of an
arbitrary small radius. Many more instances of this phenomenon, called
by Mikhail Gromov h-principle (“h” stands for homotopy), were since
then found and continue to be discovered, most recently in symplectic
topology.
I will describe the main ideas and classical methods and results of the h-principle.

Coffee will be served at 12:00 before the lecture
at Schreiber building 006