David E Speyer
Contact Information:
E-mail: speyer@post.harvard.edu or speyer@math.mit.edu
The former is a forwarding address that currently forwards to the latter. The former will
always be correct, but has problems with large files. The latter is my
current e-mail address at MIT.
Office: In MIT speak, 2-332. In more ordinary language, that means room 2-332, which is on floor 3 of building 2.
Phone (Cell): (734)-255-8610
Phone (Office): (617)-253-3661
Mail (Work):
David E Speyer
Department of Mathematics, Room 2-332
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
Mail (Home):
David E Speyer
266 Chestnut Hill Avenue
Brighton, MA
02135-5946
Map
My Name:
My last name is pronounced "spire", like the top
of a church. For the curious, it is derived from the city of
Speyer,
Germany.
About Me:
I am a visiting scholar in the department of mathematics at MIT. I am funded by a Five Year
Clay Research Fellowship.
I recently graduated from UC
Berkeley, where I was a student of Bernd Sturmfels. My thesis
is on tropical
geometry, an approach to turning algebraic geometry problems into polyhedral geometry. Before
coming to Berkeley, I was an undergraduate at Harvard. While there, I worked for
Jim Propp's
research group REACH and wrote an
undergraduate thesis on the Eichler-Shimura correspondence under William Stein. I spent the rest of my time doing
technical theater, hanging out with science
fiction fans and working on Les
Phys -- the physics musical! I spent four years
as a counselor at PROMYS, a number theory program for high school students,
and highly endorse it either as a place to go learn or to go work. I spent my own high
school summers at
MOP , which I found great but works better for some people than for others. I went to
High School at Choate Rosemary Hall and to Middle School at Talcott Mountain Academy. If you are a young nerd in Connecticut, looking for a middle school or after school program, I highly recommend Talcott.
I enjoy algebraic problems with a combinatorial flavor. If you started out with a well
motivated algebraic question but wound up with lots of little complicated pictures, I
probably want to hear about it. Some topics I can usually be relied upon to think about:
tropical geometry, cluster algebras, flag manifolds and other geometry of Lie Groups,
interesting degenerations of algebraic structures, exact results and asymptopics of perfect
matchings (such as Arctic Circle phenomena). I also know a reasonable amount of
Number Theory and enjoy talking about it, although as yet this is not a research
interest.
Along with a number of my fellow Berkeley alumnae, I blog at The Secret Blogging Seminar.
I, together with Lauren Williams and Gregg Musiker, am organizing the MIT Combinatorics Seminar for the Fall of 2008 and Spring of 2009. Please contact any of us if you would like to speak.
In my best news, I am now married to Lark-Aeryn Speyer, perviously
known as Erin Ruth Larkspur, the lovely lady pictured above. We will
be adding photos of the wedding to
this
page.
Papers:
All of my papers that are in a reasonably polished state can be found here
on the arXiv . (With the exception of my
first paper, "Every tree is 3-equitable" with Zsuzsanna Szansiszlo
and my thesis, which will be broken into several papers for publication.)
The arXiv version is not always final — some papers have minor
improvements in the published version.
Here is a complete annotated listing of my papers as of
January 23, 2009.
A non-crossing standard monomial theory with Kyle Petersen and Pavlo Pylyavskyy
One of the most classical topics in combinatorial commutative is the standard monomial basis for the flag variety. This is a basis for the Plucker algebra indexed by semi-standard Young tableaux, useful for computations in representation theory and algebraic geometry. Pavlo introduced objects he calls non-nesting tableaux which are a "non-nesting" version of semi-standard Young tableaux. In this paper, we explain the corresponding commutative algebra. We hope our work will be useful in the investigation of the cluster algebra structures on Flag varieteis and realted spaces, and of LeClerc and Zelevinsky's weakly seperated sets.
Sortable elements in infinite Coxeter groups with Nathan Reading
This is the first of a series of papers where Nathan and I take connections between Coxeter groups and cluster algebras that have been proven in finite type and generalize them to all types. This paper is purely on the Coxeter combinatorics side. We prove that Nathan's definitions of sortable elements, and the Cambrian lattice, work with almost no modification in any Coxeter group. Among our key techinical tools are (1) the use of a skew symmetric form on the root space to impose pattern avoidance conditions, giving us a type-free description of the "aligned" condition in Nathan's earlier work, and (2) an explicit description of normal vectors to any cone in the Cambrian fan, in terms of "forced and unforced skips".
Powers of Coxeter elements in infinite groups are reduced
Proceedings of the AMS, 137 (2009), 1295 — 1302.
Let W be an infinite, irreducible Coxeter group, with simple generators s1, s2, ..., sn. I show that the word s1s2 ... sns1s2 ... sn...s1s2 ... sn is reduced, for any number of repetitions of s1s2 ... sn. This answers a question of Fomin and Zelevinsky, and provides an excellent opportunity to show off a quick application of technology which Nathan and I use in our much longer paper.
I want to emphasize that the main result of this paper was obtained earlier (in the simply-laced case) by Kleiner and Pelley. My argument is inspired by theirs, but it removes the use of quiver theory and simplifies the argument on several other points.
Uniformizing Tropical Curves I: Genus Zero and One
This is the first of what will be a series of two papers explaining how to use classical parameterizations of algebraic curves to write down curves with specified tropicalizations. In this paper, we deal with genus zero and one curves. The genus zero case, in particular, is very concrete. This material is drawn from the final chapter of my thesis.
The Multidimensional Cube Recurrence with Andre Henriques
This paper returns to themes I was thinking about in 2002, when I
wrote the first octahedron and
cube recurrence
papers. In those paper, we studied three dimensional recurrences,
whose initial conditions live on a two dimensional surface. Since
then, Andre Henriques and Joel Kamnitzer have taken the octahedron
recurrence and generalized it to a recurrence in any number of
dimensions, whose initial conditions still live on a two dimensional
lattice. This recurrence computes the associator and commutator in the category of gln-crystals. It is also related to Fock and Goncharov's higher Teichmuller spaces, to a number of classical type A varieties, and to the Toda lattice heirarchy.
In this paper, Andre and I introduce a recurrence which relates to the
cube recurrence as he and Joel's work relate to the octahedron
recurrence. We show that this recurrence has the same combinatorial
properties as the cube recurrence — well definedness,
propogation of inequalities, and Laurentness. A special case gives a
coordinatization of the isotropic grassmannian. I don't know what the underlying representation theory, or the underlying algebraic geometry, is. I also don't know how to extend Gabriel and my grove technology, Andre, Dylan Thurston and I are working on this.
Matching polytopes, toric geometry, and the non-negative part of the Grassmannian with Alex Postnikov and Lauren Williams.
Journal of Algebriac Combinatorics, to appear.
We take Postnikov's positroid varieties and describe how to parameterize them by toric varieties. In particular, we can describe the totally nonnegative part of these varieties as a (toplogical) quotient of a polytope. The underlying combinatorics involves matching polytopes.
Cambrian Fans with Nathan Reading
JEMS, to appear.
Let W be a Coxeter group of finite type and c a Coxeter element. In a
series of papers (see
1,
2 and
3), Reading
introduced an equivalence relation on W called
the c-Cambrian congruence whose equivalence classes are in
natural bjection with clusters of the corresponding Cluster
Algebra. Combining cones of the Coxeter fan corresponding to
equivalent elements of W yields a coarsening of the Coxeter fan
which we term the c-Cambrian fan.
In this paper, we show that the c-Cambrian fan is a simplicial
fan whose combinatorics matches the cluster complex. We dispose of
almost all of the conjectures remaining from Reading's earlier papers
and establish several connections between the Cambrian fan and Cluster
Algebras — in particular, the g-vectors and quasi-Cartan
companions occur naturally in the Cambrian setting. Our proofs depend
on carefully checking the compatibility of a large number of
bijections when the Coxeter element c is changed in a manner
related to reversing a source in a quiver to a sink. Thankfully, now that these compatibilities have been checked, they will be available for future use.
Nathan and I are engaged in a long term research project to extend the results of this paper to infinite Coxeter groups. Our first paper on this subject is Sortable elements in infinite Coxeter groups.
A Matroid Invariant via the K-theory of the Grassmannian
Advances in Mathematics, to appear
Let x be a point in the grassmannian G(d,n) and
let T be the n-1 dimensional torus which acts
on G(d,n). Take the closure of the T-orbit through x;
the class of the structure sheaf of thish subvariety in
the K-theory of G(d,n) depends only on the matroid
of x. By some standard operations in K-theory, I
associate a polynomial to x which behaves nicely under every
standard matoid operation. Using this invariant, I prove
the f-vector conjecture from
Tropical Linear Spaces
when all of the matrods involved are realizable in characteristic
zero.
I still don't have a great combinatorial interpretation of this
polynomial -- it imposes very strong restrictions on decompositions of
matroid polytopes into smaller matroid polytopes. If anyone recognizes what this guy is, please let me know!
A Kleiman-Beritini Theorem
for sheaf tensor products with Ezra
Miller
Journal of Algebraic Geometry, 7 (2008), 335-340
Let X be a variety with a transitive action by an
algebraic group G and let E and F be coherent sheaves
on X. We prove that, for elements g in a
dense open subset of G, the sheaf Tori(E, g F)
vanishes for all i > 0. This says that, when performing intersections in K-theory, we may
take a generic translate and then forget about higher Tor's. This
is like the Kleiman-Bertini theorem, which says the same for intersections
in Chow theory in characteristic zero.
Engagement Announcement with Erin
Larkspur
New Britain Herald December 3, 2005 p. C8
Erin and I announce the beginning of a collaboration.
Cyclically Orientable Graphs
In Cluster
Algebras II, Fomin and Zelevinsky classified cluster algebras of
finite type. Their classification did not yield an effective way of
deterimning whether a given cluster algebra was of finite type. In Cluster Algebras of
Finite Type and Symmetrizable Matrices, Barot, Geiss and
Zelevinsky give an algorithm for performing this test, one step of
which involves testing whether a graph is "cyclically orientable";
i.e., whether it has an orientation in which every cycle which
occurs as an induced subgraph is cyclically oriented. In this paper, I
give a simple and rapid algorithm for solving this graph theoretic
problem and show that all cyclically orientable graphs are essentially
built by gluing together cycles along single edges.
Shortly after writing this, I learned that my main results had
been obtained independently and several months earlier by Vladimir
Gurvich of Rutgers, see his preprint Cyclically
Orientable Graphs. With Gurvich's gracious agreement, I am posting my
note so that people will be aware of the results; I completely acknowledge
that he has several months of priority.
Computing Tropical
Varieties with Tristram Bogart, Anders
Jensen, Bernd Sturmfels and Rekha Thomas
Journal for Symbolic Computation Volume 42 , Issue 1-2 (January 2007)
Pages 54-73 .
We describe an algorithm for computing tropical varieties that is roughly
a thousand times faster on high codimension examples than the naive
approach via Groebner fans. There is some non-trivial math in the proof of
correctness -- we show that the tropicalization of a prime variety is
connected in codimension one. We have implemented our algorithm as an
extension to Gfan; it is included with Gfan
0.2.
Tropical Geometry
This is my dissertation, which attempts to do the ground work to
establish tropicalization as a major tool of algebraic geometry. There
are four major sections (plus a historical introduction.) The first
section tries to develop general tools, including establishing the
equivalence of several notions of tropicalization and describing the
tropical degeneration and compactification -- these are schemes
assosciated to a subvariety of a torus over a nonarchimedean
field. The combinatorics of these schemes are indexed by a polyhedral
complex whose underlying point set is the tropicalization. For further developments on this subject, consult David Helm and Eric Katz's paper Monodromy Filtrations and the Topology of Tropical Varieties.
The second section and third section respectively
cover the material in my papers The Tropical Grassmannian and
Tropical Linear Spaces below, rewritten to emphasize their
connections to the other material of the dissertation.
The final
section studies the probleming of recognizing which graphs embedded in
Rn occur as tropicalizations of curves embedded in the
torus. It turns out that Mumford's techniques of nonarchimedean
uniformization are admirably suited to this problem. The curve
material, with a few technical hypotheses removed, will appear in Uniformizing Tropical Curves I: Genus Zero and One and a forthcoming sequel.
A few minor changes have been made to this file as compared to the
original dissertation.
Tropical Linear Spaces
SIAM J. Discrete Math. Volume 22, Issue 4, pp. 1527-1558 (2008)
I define tropical analogues of the notion of "linear space" and
"Plucker coordinates" and basic constructions for working with
them. The arXiv version of this paper is an exhaustive introduction that tells almost everything I have figured out. The most interesting aspect of the
paper is the f-vector conjecture -- I conjecture what the maximal
possible f-vector of a tropical linear space should be and provide a
great deal of evidence for this claim. The published version is stripped down, and focuses more purely on this aspect of the subject. For further progress on the f-vector conjecture, see A Matroid Invariant via the K-theory of the Grassmannian
Although it can be read independently, this paper is naturally a
sequel to my paper The
Tropical Grassmannian below.
A Broken Circuit Ring
with Nick
Proudfoot
Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie Vol. 47, No. 1, pp. 161-166 (2006)
Given a linear subspace of affine space, we study the ring of rational
functions on the linear space generated by the reciprocals of the
coordinate functions. This ring has been studied previously by Terao
and others. We find a universal Groebner basis and show that the ring
degenerates to the Stanley-Reisner ring of the broken circuit
complex.
Tropical Mathematics with Bernd Sturmfels
Mathematics Magazine, to appear
An elementary introduction to tropical mathematics, expanding on my co-author's Clay Public Lecture at Park City Math Institute 2004 (IAS/PCMI)
An arctic circle theorem for groves with Kyle Petersen
Presented at Formal Power Series and Algebraic Combinatorics 2004.
Journal of Combinatorial Theory: Series A 111 Issue 1
(2005), p. 137-164
Proves that a randomly chosen grove (introduced in my paper with
Gabriel Carroll below) is "frozen" outside a certain circle. This is
analogous to results on random tilings of Aztec Diamonds and random
Alternating Sign Matrices.
The tropical totally positive Grassmannian with Lauren Williams
Journal of Algebraic Combinatorics 22 no. 2 (2005), p.
189-210
We study the tropical analogue of the totally positive cell in the
Grassmannian, introduced by Lusztig and studied in detail by Postnikov
and others. We discover a tight connection to the combinatorics of
cluster algebras and conjecture a general connection between the
cluster complex of a cluster algebra and its totally positive
tropicalization.
Horn's Problem,
Vinnikov Curves and Hives
Duke Journal of Mathematics 127 no. 3 (2005), p. 395-428
Horn's Problem asks to characterize the possible eigenvalues of a
triples of Hermitian matrices with sum 0. Allen Knutson and
Terry Tao gave an answer in terms of combinatorial objects called
honeycombs which look like tropical curves. I explain this
phenomenon by showing that Horn's problem is equivalent to studying
the possible intersections of plane curves with prescribed topology
with the coordinate axes and then showing that the tropical version of
this criterion recovers the results of Knutson and Tao.
Note: The above linked paper does not fully spell out the link
between honeycombs and eigenvalues; the chain of logic is as follows:
by appendix I of the above linked
paper, honeycombs are equivalent to Berenstein-Zelevinsky
patterns, which compute tensor product multiplicities, which are
related to eigenvalue computations by the Kirwan-Ness theorem. Allen Knutson
has a good survey paper explaining the last step.
Reconstructing Trees
from Subtree Weights with Lior Pachter
Applied Mathematical Letters, 17 (2004), p. 615-621
In computational phylogenetics, the problem of reconstructing a metric
tree from the distances between its leaves frequently arises. We study
the similar problem of reconstructing a tree from the total lengths of
the subtrees spanned by k of its leaves.
The Tropical
Grassmannian with Bernd
Sturmfels
Advances in Geometry, 4 (2004), no. 3, p. 389-411
We study the tropicalization of the Grassmannian in its standard
Plucker emebedding. We show that its points parameterize
tropicalizations of linear spaces, give a complete description of the
case of G(2,n) and do some computations of larger cases.
I have done a good deal more work on the properties and classification
of tropicalizations of linear spaces, see my paper Tropical Linear Spaces above.
The Cube Recurrence with Gabriel Carroll
Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 11 (2004) #R73
This paper is similar to the octahedron recurrence paper below, but with
applications to Propp's cube recurrence, a peculiar recurrence that
has Laurentness and positivity properties similar to the octahedron
recurrence but has no known relation to cluster algebras. The relevant
combinatorial objects are no longer perfect matchings but "groves",
certain highly symmetric forests that deserve further study. This paper was primarily written in Propp's REACH program.
Perfect Matchings and the Octahedron Recurrence
Journal of Algebraic Combinatorics 25, no. 3, May 2007
The octahedron recurrence is a certain recurrence whose entries are
indexed by a three dimensional lattice; the recurrence grows from a
two dimensional surface of initial conditions. It follows from Fomin
and Zelevinski's results on Cluster Algebras that all of the terms of
the recurrence are Laurent polynomials in the initial values. I show
that every term in these polynomials has coefficient 1 by establishing
a bijection between these monomials and the perfect matchings of
certain graphs. Special cases include formulas for Somos-4 and Somos-5
and for the number of perfect matchings of many families of
graphs. This paper is based on research done in Propp's REACH program.
Every tree is 3-equitable (link may require academic
access) with Zsuzsanna
Szansiszlo
Discrete Mathematics, 220 (2000) 283-289
Let G be a graph whose vertices are labelled with the numbers
0, 1, ... i. Label each edge with the absolute value of the difference
between its endpoints. A labelling is called equitable if, for any two
numbers a and b from 0 to i, the number of vertices with label a
differs by at most one from the number with label b and a similar
property holds for the number of edges with each label. It is
conjectured that every tree has an equitable labelling for every i. We
prove this conjecture for i=2.
Software:
I occasionally write Mathematica notebooks to aid in studying combinatorial problems. I
ll use this section of my website to post notebooks that I think are of general interest and well enough commented to be useful to others.
SerParCore This note book lists the series-parallel matroids of given rank and number of elements. The number of such matroids is Sloane sequence A115594.
I have some notebooks which compute random groves and enumerate groves
in various settings. I'm not posting them right now because they are
poorly commented and I think all of their functionality is subsumed by
Gabriel Carroll's
GrovePak
software. If you think that you need something that GrovePak can't do,
though, send me a note and I'll see if mine can.