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Hi everyone,<br><br>This is a reminder that today Tim Susse (Bard)
speaking about RACGs and RAAGs. The title and abstract
are below. As usual, the talk will be on Thursday at 2:50pm in WH 100E.<br><br>The
speaker will be delivering the talk remotely, and we'll project it in
WH 100E. In case you can't make it and would like to join remotely, you
can join at the link:<br><br><a href="https://binghamton.zoom.us/j/96780551923" target="_blank">https://binghamton.zoom.us/j/96780551923</a><br><br>The
"seminar lunch" will again be at the picnic table just outside the main
entrance a little after 12pm (in case you need to go pick up food and
bring it back). Anyone is welcome to join!<br><br></div><div>MH<br></div><div><br>=========================================<br>Title: When is a RACG QI to a RAAG: a probabilistic approach.<br>Abstract: A celebrated theorem of Davis and Januszkiewicz shows that<br>every right-angled Artin group (RAAG) is isomorphic to a finite index subgroup of some<br>right-angled Coxeter group (RACG). The converse, however, is not<br>true and the question of which RACGs are quasi-isometric to RAAGs<br>has achieved folk status. In this talk we will discuss the state<br>of the art on this question, which uses some of the most powerful<br>tools
in Geometric Group Theory. We will focus on the generic version of this
question, using random graphs to model random right-angled Coxeter
groups and show that at low enough density the answer is (almost surely)
never.
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