Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond

2 PM, 3 Oct 2025

Prof. Mark Gross explores how scattering diagrams are a powerful tool for capturing wall-crossing data in many diverse mathematical contexts.

Prof. Mark Gross discusses the notion of scattering diagrams, a powerful means of encoding often very complex wall-crossing data in a wide range of geometric problems. Originally developed in the foundational work of Kontsevich and Soibelman, scattering diagrams have since emerged in many different contexts, including mirror symmetry, cluster algebras, wall-crossing for moduli spaces of sheaves and theoretical physics.

Prof. Mark Gross is a pure mathematician at Cambridge University. He did his PhD at UC Berkeley and has held posts at Cornell, Warwick, and UC San Diego. He is renowned for his work on mirror symmetry which has profoundly influenced algebraic, tropical and differential geometry.

Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond
Wall-crossing and scattering diagrams in geometry and beyond