Event



High Energy Theory seminar: Self-Similar Quasicrystals and Hyperbolic Honeycombs

Justin Kulp (SCGP)
- | DRL 3C6

Most people are familiar with periodic tessellations and lattices; from the sidewalk outside David Rittenhouse Laboratory to their favourite spin systems. In this talk, I will discuss two less familiar families of tessellations and their possible connections to high energy physics, condensed matter physics, and mathematics: hyperbolic tessellations and quasicrystals. After introducing the basics of regular hyperbolic lattices, I will survey constructions and surprising properties of quasicrystals (like the Penrose tiling), including their classically forbidden symmetries, long-range order, and self-similar structure. Inspired by the AdS/CFT correspondence, I will describe a mathematical relationship between hyperbolic lattices in (D+1)-dimensions and quasicrystals in D-dimensions, as well as the resolution of a conjecture by Bill Thurston. Based on work to appear with Latham Boyle.