The outcome of the project so far comprises 13 articles freely available on the preprint server arXiv.org as well as the researcher's homepage, which have been submitted to peer-reviewed journals. Among these preprints, 9 were written during the 17 month duration of the fellowship, including 2 survey articles making the results and their context available to a wider mathematical audience. Moreover, 7 preprints have already been published or accepted for publication, with one paper appearing in a top 5 journal (Inventiones) and others in very good general journals (e.g. Compositio, Advances). The results contained in this work cover most of the goals set out in the project, taking into account the early termination (17 instead of 24 months). We single out three highlights:
(1) In joint work with several coauthors, we have studied the interactions between equivariant and chromatic homotopy theory by determining the blueshift behavior of geometric fixed point functors. This led to a resolution of the log_p-conjecture of Balmer--Sanders and consequently the computation of the Balmer spectrum of the G-equivariant stable homotopy category for any finite abelian group G. These results have subsequently been extended partially to all compact Lie groups G.
(2) With Schlank and Stapleton we develop a theory of ultraproducts of categories and apply it to construct compactifications of chromatic categories in such a way that the boundary controls generic information about the interior. This theory gave rise to a solution of the algebraicity problem in chromatic homotopy theory, by constructing and identifying the limit for p --> oo of the local stable homotopy category.
(3) In forthcoming work with Schlank and Stevenson, we develop a framework in which the motivating idea of the project can be made precise. More precisely, we construct an appropriate geometry in which every chromatic category C naturally and faithfully ``decomposes'' into a bundle of categories over its Balmer spectrum Spc(C), thereby recovering and extending Balmer's tensor-triangular geometry. This fully realizes the overarching goal of the project.
The fellow has presented the results of this work at 6 international conferences and in several seminars, besides further talks given by his collaborators.