fbpx
Wikipedia

Birational geometry

In mathematics, birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower-dimensional subsets. This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rational functions rather than polynomials; the map may fail to be defined where the rational functions have poles.

The circle is birationally equivalent to the line. One birational map between them is stereographic projection, pictured here.

Birational maps edit

Rational maps edit

A rational map from one variety (understood to be irreducible)   to another variety  , written as a dashed arrow X Y, is defined as a morphism from a nonempty open subset   to  . By definition of the Zariski topology used in algebraic geometry, a nonempty open subset   is always dense in  , in fact the complement of a lower-dimensional subset. Concretely, a rational map can be written in coordinates using rational functions.

Birational maps edit

A birational map from X to Y is a rational map f : XY such that there is a rational map YX inverse to f. A birational map induces an isomorphism from a nonempty open subset of X to a nonempty open subset of Y, and vice versa: an isomorphism between nonempty open subsets of X, Y by definition gives a birational map f : XY. In this case, X and Y are said to be birational, or birationally equivalent. In algebraic terms, two varieties over a field k are birational if and only if their function fields are isomorphic as extension fields of k.

A special case is a birational morphism f : XY, meaning a morphism which is birational. That is, f is defined everywhere, but its inverse may not be. Typically, this happens because a birational morphism contracts some subvarieties of X to points in Y.

Birational equivalence and rationality edit

A variety X is said to be rational if it is birational to affine space (or equivalently, to projective space) of some dimension. Rationality is a very natural property: it means that X minus some lower-dimensional subset can be identified with affine space minus some lower-dimensional subset.

Birational equivalence of a plane conic edit

For example, the circle   with equation   in the affine plane is a rational curve, because there is a rational map f :  X given by

 

which has a rational inverse g: X  given by

 

Applying the map f with t a rational number gives a systematic construction of Pythagorean triples.

The rational map   is not defined on the locus where  . So, on the complex affine line  ,   is a morphism on the open subset  ,  . Likewise, the rational map g : X  is not defined at the point (0,−1) in  .

Birational equivalence of smooth quadrics and Pn edit

More generally, a smooth quadric (degree 2) hypersurface X of any dimension n is rational, by stereographic projection. (For X a quadric over a field k, X must be assumed to have a k-rational point; this is automatic if k is algebraically closed.) To define stereographic projection, let p be a point in X. Then a birational map from X to the projective space   of lines through p is given by sending a point q in X to the line through p and q. This is a birational equivalence but not an isomorphism of varieties, because it fails to be defined where q = p (and the inverse map fails to be defined at those lines through p which are contained in X).

Birational equivalence of quadric surface edit

The Segre embedding gives an embedding   given by

 

The image is the quadric surface   in  . That gives another proof that this quadric surface is rational, since   is obviously rational, having an open subset isomorphic to  .

Minimal models and resolution of singularities edit

Every algebraic variety is birational to a projective variety (Chow's lemma). So, for the purposes of birational classification, it is enough to work only with projective varieties, and this is usually the most convenient setting.

Much deeper is Hironaka's 1964 theorem on resolution of singularities: over a field of characteristic 0 (such as the complex numbers), every variety is birational to a smooth projective variety. Given that, it is enough to classify smooth projective varieties up to birational equivalence.

In dimension 1, if two smooth projective curves are birational, then they are isomorphic. But that fails in dimension at least 2, by the blowing up construction. By blowing up, every smooth projective variety of dimension at least 2 is birational to infinitely many "bigger" varieties, for example with bigger Betti numbers.

This leads to the idea of minimal models: is there a unique simplest variety in each birational equivalence class? The modern definition is that a projective variety X is minimal if the canonical line bundle KX has nonnegative degree on every curve in X; in other words, KX is nef. It is easy to check that blown-up varieties are never minimal.

This notion works perfectly for algebraic surfaces (varieties of dimension 2). In modern terms, one central result of the Italian school of algebraic geometry from 1890–1910, part of the classification of surfaces, is that every surface X is birational either to a product   for some curve C or to a minimal surface Y.[1] The two cases are mutually exclusive, and Y is unique if it exists. When Y exists, it is called the minimal model of X.

Birational invariants edit

At first, it is not clear how to show that there are any algebraic varieties which are not rational. In order to prove this, some birational invariants of algebraic varieties are needed. A birational invariant is any kind of number, ring, etc which is the same, or isomorphic, for all varieties that are birationally equivalent.

Plurigenera edit

One useful set of birational invariants are the plurigenera. The canonical bundle of a smooth variety X of dimension n means the line bundle of n-forms KX = Ωn, which is the nth exterior power of the cotangent bundle of X. For an integer d, the dth tensor power of KX is again a line bundle. For d ≥ 0, the vector space of global sections H0(X, KXd) has the remarkable property that a birational map f : XY between smooth projective varieties induces an isomorphism H0(X, KXd) ≅ H0(Y, KYd).[2]

For d ≥ 0, define the dth plurigenus Pd as the dimension of the vector space H0(X, KXd); then the plurigenera are birational invariants for smooth projective varieties. In particular, if any plurigenus Pd with d > 0 is not zero, then X is not rational.

Kodaira dimension edit

A fundamental birational invariant is the Kodaira dimension, which measures the growth of the plurigenera Pd as d goes to infinity. The Kodaira dimension divides all varieties of dimension n into n + 2 types, with Kodaira dimension −∞, 0, 1, ..., or n. This is a measure of the complexity of a variety, with projective space having Kodaira dimension −∞. The most complicated varieties are those with Kodaira dimension equal to their dimension n, called varieties of general type.

Summands of ⊗kΩ1 and some Hodge numbers edit

More generally, for any natural summand

 

of the r-th tensor power of the cotangent bundle Ω1 with r ≥ 0, the vector space of global sections H0(X, E1)) is a birational invariant for smooth projective varieties. In particular, the Hodge numbers

 

are birational invariants of X. (Most other Hodge numbers hp,q are not birational invariants, as shown by blowing up.)

Fundamental group of smooth projective varieties edit

The fundamental group π1(X) is a birational invariant for smooth complex projective varieties.

The "Weak factorization theorem", proved by Abramovich, Karu, Matsuki, and Włodarczyk (2002), says that any birational map between two smooth complex projective varieties can be decomposed into finitely many blow-ups or blow-downs of smooth subvarieties. This is important to know, but it can still be very hard to determine whether two smooth projective varieties are birational.

Minimal models in higher dimensions edit

A projective variety X is called minimal if the canonical bundle KX is nef. For X of dimension 2, it is enough to consider smooth varieties in this definition. In dimensions at least 3, minimal varieties must be allowed to have certain mild singularities, for which KX is still well-behaved; these are called terminal singularities.

That being said, the minimal model conjecture would imply that every variety X is either covered by rational curves or birational to a minimal variety Y. When it exists, Y is called a minimal model of X.

Minimal models are not unique in dimensions at least 3, but any two minimal varieties which are birational are very close. For example, they are isomorphic outside subsets of codimension at least 2, and more precisely they are related by a sequence of flops. So the minimal model conjecture would give strong information about the birational classification of algebraic varieties.

The conjecture was proved in dimension 3 by Mori.[3] There has been great progress in higher dimensions, although the general problem remains open. In particular, Birkar, Cascini, Hacon, and McKernan (2010)[4] proved that every variety of general type over a field of characteristic zero has a minimal model.

Uniruled varieties edit

A variety is called uniruled if it is covered by rational curves. A uniruled variety does not have a minimal model, but there is a good substitute: Birkar, Cascini, Hacon, and McKernan showed that every uniruled variety over a field of characteristic zero is birational to a Fano fiber space.[a] This leads to the problem of the birational classification of Fano fiber spaces and (as the most interesting special case) Fano varieties. By definition, a projective variety X is Fano if the anticanonical bundle   is ample. Fano varieties can be considered the algebraic varieties which are most similar to projective space.

In dimension 2, every Fano variety (known as a Del Pezzo surface) over an algebraically closed field is rational. A major discovery in the 1970s was that starting in dimension 3, there are many Fano varieties which are not rational. In particular, smooth cubic 3-folds are not rational by Clemens–Griffiths (1972), and smooth quartic 3-folds are not rational by Iskovskikh–Manin (1971). Nonetheless, the problem of determining exactly which Fano varieties are rational is far from solved. For example, it is not known whether there is any smooth cubic hypersurface in   with n ≥ 4 which is not rational.

Birational automorphism groups edit

Algebraic varieties differ widely in how many birational automorphisms they have. Every variety of general type is extremely rigid, in the sense that its birational automorphism group is finite. At the other extreme, the birational automorphism group of projective space   over a field k, known as the Cremona group Crn(k), is large (in a sense, infinite-dimensional) for n ≥ 2. For n = 2, the complex Cremona group   is generated by the "quadratic transformation"

[x,y,z] ↦ [1/x, 1/y, 1/z]

together with the group   of automorphisms of   by Max Noether and Castelnuovo. By contrast, the Cremona group in dimensions n ≥ 3 is very much a mystery: no explicit set of generators is known.

Iskovskikh–Manin (1971) showed that the birational automorphism group of a smooth quartic 3-fold is equal to its automorphism group, which is finite. In this sense, quartic 3-folds are far from being rational, since the birational automorphism group of a rational variety is enormous. This phenomenon of "birational rigidity" has since been discovered in many other Fano fiber spaces.[citation needed]

Applications edit

Birational geometry has found applications in other areas of geometry, but especially in traditional problems in algebraic geometry.

Famously the minimal model program was used to construct moduli spaces of varieties of general type by János Kollár and Nicholas Shepherd-Barron, now known as KSB moduli spaces.[5]

Birational geometry has recently found important applications in the study of K-stability of Fano varieties through general existence results for Kähler–Einstein metrics, in the development of explicit invariants of Fano varieties to test K-stability by computing on birational models, and in the construction of moduli spaces of Fano varieties.[6] Important results in birational geometry such as Birkar's proof of boundedness of Fano varieties have been used to prove existence results for moduli spaces.

See also edit

Citations edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Birkar et al. (2010, Corollary 1.3.3), implies that every uniruled variety in characteristic zero is birational to a Fano fiber space, using the easier result that a uniruled variety X is covered by a family of curves on which KX has negative degree. A reference for the latter fact is Debarre (2001, Corollary 4.11) and Example 4.7(1).

References edit

  • Abramovich, Dan; Karu, Kalle; Matsuki, Kenji; Włodarczyk, Jarosław (2002), "Torification and factorization of birational maps", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 15 (3): 531–572, arXiv:math/9904135, doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-02-00396-X, MR 1896232, S2CID 18211120
  • Birkar, Caucher; Cascini, Paolo; Hacon, Christopher D.; McKernan, James (2010), "Existence of minimal models for varieties of log general type", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 23 (2): 405–468, arXiv:math.AG/0610203, Bibcode:2010JAMS...23..405B, doi:10.1090/S0894-0347-09-00649-3, MR 2601039, S2CID 3342362
  • Clemens, C. Herbert; Griffiths, Phillip A. (1972), "The intermediate Jacobian of the cubic threefold", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 95 (2): 281–356, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.401.4550, doi:10.2307/1970801, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 1970801, MR 0302652
  • Debarre, Olivier (2001). Higher-Dimensional Algebraic Geometry. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-95227-7. MR 1841091.
  • Griffiths, Phillip; Harris, Joseph (1978). Principles of Algebraic Geometry. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-32792-9. MR 0507725.
  • Hartshorne, Robin (1977). Algebraic Geometry. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-90244-9. MR 0463157.
  • Kollár, János (2013). "Moduli of varieties of general type". Handbook of moduli. Vol. 2. pp. 131–157. arXiv:1008.0621. ISBN 9781571462589. Zbl 1322.14006.
  • Iskovskih, V. A.; Manin, Ju. I. (1971), "Three-dimensional quartics and counterexamples to the Lüroth problem", Matematicheskii Sbornik, Novaya Seriya, 86 (1): 140–166, Bibcode:1971SbMat..15..141I, doi:10.1070/SM1971v015n01ABEH001536, MR 0291172
  • Kollár, János; Mori, Shigefumi (1998), Birational Geometry of Algebraic Varieties, Cambridge University Press, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511662560, ISBN 978-0-521-63277-5, MR 1658959
  • Mori, Shigefumi (1988), "Flip theorem and the existence of minimal models for 3-folds", Journal of the American Mathematical Society, 1 (1): 117–253, doi:10.2307/1990969, ISSN 0894-0347, JSTOR 1990969, MR 0924704
  • Xu, Chenyang (2021). "K-stability of Fano varieties: An algebro-geometric approach". EMS Surveys in Mathematical Sciences. 8: 265–354. doi:10.4171/EMSS/51. S2CID 204829174.

birational, geometry, mathematics, birational, geometry, field, algebraic, geometry, which, goal, determine, when, algebraic, varieties, isomorphic, outside, lower, dimensional, subsets, this, amounts, studying, mappings, that, given, rational, functions, rath. In mathematics birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower dimensional subsets This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rational functions rather than polynomials the map may fail to be defined where the rational functions have poles The circle is birationally equivalent to the line One birational map between them is stereographic projection pictured here Contents 1 Birational maps 1 1 Rational maps 1 2 Birational maps 1 3 Birational equivalence and rationality 1 3 1 Birational equivalence of a plane conic 1 3 2 Birational equivalence of smooth quadrics and Pn 1 3 2 1 Birational equivalence of quadric surface 2 Minimal models and resolution of singularities 3 Birational invariants 3 1 Plurigenera 3 2 Kodaira dimension 3 3 Summands of kW1 and some Hodge numbers 3 4 Fundamental group of smooth projective varieties 4 Minimal models in higher dimensions 5 Uniruled varieties 6 Birational automorphism groups 7 Applications 8 See also 9 Citations 9 1 Notes 10 ReferencesBirational maps editRational maps edit A rational map from one variety understood to be irreducible X displaystyle X nbsp to another variety Y displaystyle Y nbsp written as a dashed arrow X Y is defined as a morphism from a nonempty open subset U X displaystyle U subset X nbsp to Y displaystyle Y nbsp By definition of the Zariski topology used in algebraic geometry a nonempty open subset U displaystyle U nbsp is always dense in X displaystyle X nbsp in fact the complement of a lower dimensional subset Concretely a rational map can be written in coordinates using rational functions Birational maps edit A birational map from X to Y is a rational map f X Y such that there is a rational map Y X inverse to f A birational map induces an isomorphism from a nonempty open subset of X to a nonempty open subset of Y and vice versa an isomorphism between nonempty open subsets of X Y by definition gives a birational map f X Y In this case X and Y are said to be birational or birationally equivalent In algebraic terms two varieties over a field k are birational if and only if their function fields are isomorphic as extension fields of k A special case is a birational morphism f X Y meaning a morphism which is birational That is f is defined everywhere but its inverse may not be Typically this happens because a birational morphism contracts some subvarieties of X to points in Y Birational equivalence and rationality edit A variety X is said to be rational if it is birational to affine space or equivalently to projective space of some dimension Rationality is a very natural property it means that X minus some lower dimensional subset can be identified with affine space minus some lower dimensional subset Birational equivalence of a plane conic edit For example the circle X displaystyle X nbsp with equation x 2 y 2 1 0 displaystyle x 2 y 2 1 0 nbsp in the affine plane is a rational curve because there is a rational map f A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp X given by f t 2 t 1 t 2 1 t 2 1 t 2 displaystyle f t left frac 2t 1 t 2 frac 1 t 2 1 t 2 right nbsp which has a rational inverse g X A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp given by g x y 1 y x displaystyle g x y frac 1 y x nbsp Applying the map f with t a rational number gives a systematic construction of Pythagorean triples The rational map f displaystyle f nbsp is not defined on the locus where 1 t 2 0 displaystyle 1 t 2 0 nbsp So on the complex affine line A C 1 displaystyle mathbb A mathbb C 1 nbsp f displaystyle f nbsp is a morphism on the open subset U A C 1 i i displaystyle U mathbb A mathbb C 1 i i nbsp f U X displaystyle f U to X nbsp Likewise the rational map g X A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp is not defined at the point 0 1 in X displaystyle X nbsp Birational equivalence of smooth quadrics and Pn edit More generally a smooth quadric degree 2 hypersurface X of any dimension n is rational by stereographic projection For X a quadric over a field k X must be assumed to have a k rational point this is automatic if k is algebraically closed To define stereographic projection let p be a point in X Then a birational map from X to the projective space P n displaystyle mathbb P n nbsp of lines through p is given by sending a point q in X to the line through p and q This is a birational equivalence but not an isomorphism of varieties because it fails to be defined where q p and the inverse map fails to be defined at those lines through p which are contained in X Birational equivalence of quadric surface edit The Segre embedding gives an embedding P 1 P 1 P 3 displaystyle mathbb P 1 times mathbb P 1 to mathbb P 3 nbsp given by x y z w x z x w y z y w displaystyle x y z w mapsto xz xw yz yw nbsp The image is the quadric surface x 0 x 3 x 1 x 2 displaystyle x 0 x 3 x 1 x 2 nbsp in P 3 displaystyle mathbb P 3 nbsp That gives another proof that this quadric surface is rational since P 1 P 1 displaystyle mathbb P 1 times mathbb P 1 nbsp is obviously rational having an open subset isomorphic to A 2 displaystyle mathbb A 2 nbsp Minimal models and resolution of singularities editEvery algebraic variety is birational to a projective variety Chow s lemma So for the purposes of birational classification it is enough to work only with projective varieties and this is usually the most convenient setting Much deeper is Hironaka s 1964 theorem on resolution of singularities over a field of characteristic 0 such as the complex numbers every variety is birational to a smooth projective variety Given that it is enough to classify smooth projective varieties up to birational equivalence In dimension 1 if two smooth projective curves are birational then they are isomorphic But that fails in dimension at least 2 by the blowing up construction By blowing up every smooth projective variety of dimension at least 2 is birational to infinitely many bigger varieties for example with bigger Betti numbers This leads to the idea of minimal models is there a unique simplest variety in each birational equivalence class The modern definition is that a projective variety X is minimal if the canonical line bundle KX has nonnegative degree on every curve in X in other words KX is nef It is easy to check that blown up varieties are never minimal This notion works perfectly for algebraic surfaces varieties of dimension 2 In modern terms one central result of the Italian school of algebraic geometry from 1890 1910 part of the classification of surfaces is that every surface X is birational either to a product P 1 C displaystyle mathbb P 1 times C nbsp for some curve C or to a minimal surface Y 1 The two cases are mutually exclusive and Y is unique if it exists When Y exists it is called the minimal model of X Birational invariants editMain article Birational invariant At first it is not clear how to show that there are any algebraic varieties which are not rational In order to prove this some birational invariants of algebraic varieties are needed A birational invariant is any kind of number ring etc which is the same or isomorphic for all varieties that are birationally equivalent Plurigenera edit One useful set of birational invariants are the plurigenera The canonical bundle of a smooth variety X of dimension n means the line bundle of n forms KX Wn which is the nth exterior power of the cotangent bundle of X For an integer d the dth tensor power of KX is again a line bundle For d 0 the vector space of global sections H0 X KXd has the remarkable property that a birational map f X Y between smooth projective varieties induces an isomorphism H0 X KXd H0 Y KYd 2 For d 0 define the dth plurigenus Pd as the dimension of the vector space H0 X KXd then the plurigenera are birational invariants for smooth projective varieties In particular if any plurigenus Pd with d gt 0 is not zero then X is not rational Kodaira dimension edit Main article Kodaira dimension A fundamental birational invariant is the Kodaira dimension which measures the growth of the plurigenera Pd as d goes to infinity The Kodaira dimension divides all varieties of dimension n into n 2 types with Kodaira dimension 0 1 or n This is a measure of the complexity of a variety with projective space having Kodaira dimension The most complicated varieties are those with Kodaira dimension equal to their dimension n called varieties of general type Summands of kW1 and some Hodge numbers edit More generally for any natural summand E W 1 k W 1 displaystyle E Omega 1 bigotimes k Omega 1 nbsp of the r th tensor power of the cotangent bundle W1 with r 0 the vector space of global sections H0 X E W1 is a birational invariant for smooth projective varieties In particular the Hodge numbers h p 0 H 0 X W p displaystyle h p 0 H 0 X Omega p nbsp are birational invariants of X Most other Hodge numbers hp q are not birational invariants as shown by blowing up Fundamental group of smooth projective varieties edit The fundamental group p1 X is a birational invariant for smooth complex projective varieties The Weak factorization theorem proved by Abramovich Karu Matsuki and Wlodarczyk 2002 says that any birational map between two smooth complex projective varieties can be decomposed into finitely many blow ups or blow downs of smooth subvarieties This is important to know but it can still be very hard to determine whether two smooth projective varieties are birational Minimal models in higher dimensions editMain article Minimal model program A projective variety X is called minimal if the canonical bundle KX is nef For X of dimension 2 it is enough to consider smooth varieties in this definition In dimensions at least 3 minimal varieties must be allowed to have certain mild singularities for which KX is still well behaved these are called terminal singularities That being said the minimal model conjecture would imply that every variety X is either covered by rational curves or birational to a minimal variety Y When it exists Y is called a minimal model of X Minimal models are not unique in dimensions at least 3 but any two minimal varieties which are birational are very close For example they are isomorphic outside subsets of codimension at least 2 and more precisely they are related by a sequence of flops So the minimal model conjecture would give strong information about the birational classification of algebraic varieties The conjecture was proved in dimension 3 by Mori 3 There has been great progress in higher dimensions although the general problem remains open In particular Birkar Cascini Hacon and McKernan 2010 4 proved that every variety of general type over a field of characteristic zero has a minimal model Uniruled varieties editMain article Ruled variety A variety is called uniruled if it is covered by rational curves A uniruled variety does not have a minimal model but there is a good substitute Birkar Cascini Hacon and McKernan showed that every uniruled variety over a field of characteristic zero is birational to a Fano fiber space a This leads to the problem of the birational classification of Fano fiber spaces and as the most interesting special case Fano varieties By definition a projective variety X is Fano if the anticanonical bundle K X displaystyle K X nbsp is ample Fano varieties can be considered the algebraic varieties which are most similar to projective space In dimension 2 every Fano variety known as a Del Pezzo surface over an algebraically closed field is rational A major discovery in the 1970s was that starting in dimension 3 there are many Fano varieties which are not rational In particular smooth cubic 3 folds are not rational by Clemens Griffiths 1972 and smooth quartic 3 folds are not rational by Iskovskikh Manin 1971 Nonetheless the problem of determining exactly which Fano varieties are rational is far from solved For example it is not known whether there is any smooth cubic hypersurface in P n 1 displaystyle mathbb P n 1 nbsp with n 4 which is not rational Birational automorphism groups editAlgebraic varieties differ widely in how many birational automorphisms they have Every variety of general type is extremely rigid in the sense that its birational automorphism group is finite At the other extreme the birational automorphism group of projective space P n displaystyle mathbb P n nbsp over a field k known as the Cremona group Crn k is large in a sense infinite dimensional for n 2 For n 2 the complex Cremona group C r 2 C displaystyle Cr 2 mathbb C nbsp is generated by the quadratic transformation x y z 1 x 1 y 1 z together with the group P G L 3 C displaystyle PGL 3 mathbb C nbsp of automorphisms of P 2 displaystyle mathbb P 2 nbsp by Max Noether and Castelnuovo By contrast the Cremona group in dimensions n 3 is very much a mystery no explicit set of generators is known Iskovskikh Manin 1971 showed that the birational automorphism group of a smooth quartic 3 fold is equal to its automorphism group which is finite In this sense quartic 3 folds are far from being rational since the birational automorphism group of a rational variety is enormous This phenomenon of birational rigidity has since been discovered in many other Fano fiber spaces citation needed Applications editBirational geometry has found applications in other areas of geometry but especially in traditional problems in algebraic geometry Famously the minimal model program was used to construct moduli spaces of varieties of general type by Janos Kollar and Nicholas Shepherd Barron now known as KSB moduli spaces 5 Birational geometry has recently found important applications in the study of K stability of Fano varieties through general existence results for Kahler Einstein metrics in the development of explicit invariants of Fano varieties to test K stability by computing on birational models and in the construction of moduli spaces of Fano varieties 6 Important results in birational geometry such as Birkar s proof of boundedness of Fano varieties have been used to prove existence results for moduli spaces See also editAbundance conjectureCitations edit Kollar amp Mori 1998 Theorem 1 29 Hartshorne 1977 Exercise II 8 8 Mori 1988 Birkar et al 2010 Kollar 2013 Xu 2021 Notes edit Birkar et al 2010 Corollary 1 3 3 implies that every uniruled variety in characteristic zero is birational to a Fano fiber space using the easier result that a uniruled variety X is covered by a family of curves on which KX has negative degree A reference for the latter fact is Debarre 2001 Corollary 4 11 and Example 4 7 1 References editAbramovich Dan Karu Kalle Matsuki Kenji Wlodarczyk Jaroslaw 2002 Torification and factorization of birational maps Journal of the American Mathematical Society 15 3 531 572 arXiv math 9904135 doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 02 00396 X MR 1896232 S2CID 18211120 Birkar Caucher Cascini Paolo Hacon Christopher D McKernan James 2010 Existence of minimal models for varieties of log general type Journal of the American Mathematical Society 23 2 405 468 arXiv math AG 0610203 Bibcode 2010JAMS 23 405B doi 10 1090 S0894 0347 09 00649 3 MR 2601039 S2CID 3342362 Clemens C Herbert Griffiths Phillip A 1972 The intermediate Jacobian of the cubic threefold Annals of Mathematics Second Series 95 2 281 356 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 401 4550 doi 10 2307 1970801 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 1970801 MR 0302652 Debarre Olivier 2001 Higher Dimensional Algebraic Geometry Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 95227 7 MR 1841091 Griffiths Phillip Harris Joseph 1978 Principles of Algebraic Geometry John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 32792 9 MR 0507725 Hartshorne Robin 1977 Algebraic Geometry Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90244 9 MR 0463157 Kollar Janos 2013 Moduli of varieties of general type Handbook of moduli Vol 2 pp 131 157 arXiv 1008 0621 ISBN 9781571462589 Zbl 1322 14006 Iskovskih V A Manin Ju I 1971 Three dimensional quartics and counterexamples to the Luroth problem Matematicheskii Sbornik Novaya Seriya 86 1 140 166 Bibcode 1971SbMat 15 141I doi 10 1070 SM1971v015n01ABEH001536 MR 0291172 Kollar Janos Mori Shigefumi 1998 Birational Geometry of Algebraic Varieties Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511662560 ISBN 978 0 521 63277 5 MR 1658959 Mori Shigefumi 1988 Flip theorem and the existence of minimal models for 3 folds Journal of the American Mathematical Society 1 1 117 253 doi 10 2307 1990969 ISSN 0894 0347 JSTOR 1990969 MR 0924704 Xu Chenyang 2021 K stability of Fano varieties An algebro geometric approach EMS Surveys in Mathematical Sciences 8 265 354 doi 10 4171 EMSS 51 S2CID 204829174 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Birational geometry amp oldid 1169993259, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.