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We present an introduction to Berkovich's theory of non-archimedean
analytic spaces that emphasizes its applications in various fields.
The first part contains surveys of a foundational nature, including
an introduction to Berkovich analytic spaces by M. Temkin, and to
etale cohomology by A. Ducros, as well as a short note by C. Favre
on the topology of some Berkovich spaces. The second part focuses
on applications to geometry. A second text by A. Ducros contains a
new proof of the fact that the higher direct images of a coherent
sheaf under a proper map are coherent, and B. Remy, A. Thuillier
and A. Werner provide an overview of their work on the
compactification of Bruhat-Tits buildings using Berkovich analytic
geometry. The third and final part explores the relationship
between non-archimedean geometry and dynamics. A contribution by M.
Jonsson contains a thorough discussion of non-archimedean dynamical
systems in dimension 1 and 2. Finally a survey by J.-P. Otal gives
an account of Morgan-Shalen's theory of compactification of
character varieties. This book will provide the reader with enough
material on the basic concepts and constructions related to
Berkovich spaces to move on to more advanced research articles on
the subject. We also hope that the applications presented here will
inspire the reader to discover new settings where these beautiful
and intricate objects might arise.
New mathematical research in arithmetic dynamics In The Arithmetic
of Polynomial Dynamical Pairs, Charles Favre and Thomas Gauthier
present new mathematical research in the field of arithmetic
dynamics. Specifically, the authors study one-dimensional algebraic
families of pairs given by a polynomial with a marked point.
Combining tools from arithmetic geometry and holomorphic dynamics,
they prove an “unlikely intersection” statement for such pairs,
thereby demonstrating strong rigidity features for them. They
further describe one-dimensional families in the moduli space of
polynomials containing infinitely many postcritically finite
parameters, proving the dynamical André-Oort conjecture for curves
in this context, originally stated by Baker and DeMarco. This is a
reader-friendly invitation to a new and exciting research area that
brings together sophisticated tools from many branches of
mathematics.
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