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Hodge structure

In mathematics, a Hodge structure, named after W. V. D. Hodge, is an algebraic structure at the level of linear algebra, similar to the one that Hodge theory gives to the cohomology groups of a smooth and compact Kähler manifold. Hodge structures have been generalized for all complex varieties (even if they are singular and non-complete) in the form of mixed Hodge structures, defined by Pierre Deligne (1970). A variation of Hodge structure is a family of Hodge structures parameterized by a manifold, first studied by Phillip Griffiths (1968). All these concepts were further generalized to mixed Hodge modules over complex varieties by Morihiko Saito (1989).

Hodge structures edit

Definition of Hodge structures edit

A pure Hodge structure of integer weight n consists of an abelian group   and a decomposition of its complexification H into a direct sum of complex subspaces  , where  , with the property that the complex conjugate of   is  :

 
 

An equivalent definition is obtained by replacing the direct sum decomposition of H by the Hodge filtration, a finite decreasing filtration of H by complex subspaces   subject to the condition

 

The relation between these two descriptions is given as follows:

 
 

For example, if X is a compact Kähler manifold,   is the n-th cohomology group of X with integer coefficients, then   is its n-th cohomology group with complex coefficients and Hodge theory provides the decomposition of H into a direct sum as above, so that these data define a pure Hodge structure of weight n. On the other hand, the Hodge–de Rham spectral sequence supplies   with the decreasing filtration by   as in the second definition.[1]

For applications in algebraic geometry, namely, classification of complex projective varieties by their periods, the set of all Hodge structures of weight n on   is too big. Using the Riemann bilinear relations, in this case called Hodge Riemann bilinear relations, it can be substantially simplified. A polarized Hodge structure of weight n consists of a Hodge structure   and a non-degenerate integer bilinear form Q on   (polarization), which is extended to H by linearity, and satisfying the conditions:

 

In terms of the Hodge filtration, these conditions imply that

 

where C is the Weil operator on H, given by   on  .

Yet another definition of a Hodge structure is based on the equivalence between the  -grading on a complex vector space and the action of the circle group U(1). In this definition, an action of the multiplicative group of complex numbers   viewed as a two-dimensional real algebraic torus, is given on H.[2] This action must have the property that a real number a acts by an. The subspace   is the subspace on which   acts as multiplication by  

A-Hodge structure edit

In the theory of motives, it becomes important to allow more general coefficients for the cohomology. The definition of a Hodge structure is modified by fixing a Noetherian subring A of the field   of real numbers, for which   is a field. Then a pure Hodge A-structure of weight n is defined as before, replacing   with A. There are natural functors of base change and restriction relating Hodge A-structures and B-structures for A a subring of B.

Mixed Hodge structures edit

It was noticed by Jean-Pierre Serre in the 1960s based on the Weil conjectures that even singular (possibly reducible) and non-complete algebraic varieties should admit 'virtual Betti numbers'. More precisely, one should be able to assign to any algebraic variety X a polynomial PX(t), called its virtual Poincaré polynomial, with the properties

  • If X is nonsingular and projective (or complete)
     
  • If Y is closed algebraic subset of X and U = X \ Y
     

The existence of such polynomials would follow from the existence of an analogue of Hodge structure in the cohomologies of a general (singular and non-complete) algebraic variety. The novel feature is that the nth cohomology of a general variety looks as if it contained pieces of different weights. This led Alexander Grothendieck to his conjectural theory of motives and motivated a search for an extension of Hodge theory, which culminated in the work of Pierre Deligne. He introduced the notion of a mixed Hodge structure, developed techniques for working with them, gave their construction (based on Heisuke Hironaka's resolution of singularities) and related them to the weights on l-adic cohomology, proving the last part of the Weil conjectures.

Example of curves edit

To motivate the definition, consider the case of a reducible complex algebraic curve X consisting of two nonsingular components,   and  , which transversally intersect at the points   and  . Further, assume that the components are not compact, but can be compactified by adding the points  . The first cohomology group of the curve X (with compact support) is dual to the first homology group, which is easier to visualize. There are three types of one-cycles in this group. First, there are elements   representing small loops around the punctures  . Then there are elements   that are coming from the first homology of the compactification of each of the components. The one-cycle in   ( ) corresponding to a cycle in the compactification of this component, is not canonical: these elements are determined modulo the span of  . Finally, modulo the first two types, the group is generated by a combinatorial cycle   which goes from   to  along a path in one component   and comes back along a path in the other component  . This suggests that   admits an increasing filtration

 

whose successive quotients Wn/Wn−1 originate from the cohomology of smooth complete varieties, hence admit (pure) Hodge structures, albeit of different weights. Further examples can be found in "A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory".[3]

Definition of mixed Hodge structure edit

A mixed Hodge structure on an abelian group   consists of a finite decreasing filtration Fp on the complex vector space H (the complexification of  ), called the Hodge filtration and a finite increasing filtration Wi on the rational vector space   (obtained by extending the scalars to rational numbers), called the weight filtration, subject to the requirement that the n-th associated graded quotient of   with respect to the weight filtration, together with the filtration induced by F on its complexification, is a pure Hodge structure of weight n, for all integer n. Here the induced filtration on

 

is defined by

 

One can define a notion of a morphism of mixed Hodge structures, which has to be compatible with the filtrations F and W and prove the following:

Theorem. Mixed Hodge structures form an abelian category. The kernels and cokernels in this category coincide with the usual kernels and cokernels in the category of vector spaces, with the induced filtrations.

The total cohomology of a compact Kähler manifold has a mixed Hodge structure, where the nth space of the weight filtration Wn is the direct sum of the cohomology groups (with rational coefficients) of degree less than or equal to n. Therefore, one can think of classical Hodge theory in the compact, complex case as providing a double grading on the complex cohomology group, which defines an increasing filtration Fp and a decreasing filtration Wn that are compatible in certain way. In general, the total cohomology space still has these two filtrations, but they no longer come from a direct sum decomposition. In relation with the third definition of the pure Hodge structure, one can say that a mixed Hodge structure cannot be described using the action of the group   An important insight of Deligne is that in the mixed case there is a more complicated noncommutative proalgebraic group that can be used to the same effect using Tannakian formalism.

Moreover, the category of (mixed) Hodge structures admits a good notion of tensor product, corresponding to the product of varieties, as well as related concepts of inner Hom and dual object, making it into a Tannakian category. By Tannaka–Krein philosophy, this category is equivalent to the category of finite-dimensional representations of a certain group, which Deligne, Milne and et el. has explicitly described, see Deligne & Milne (1982) [4] and Deligne (1994). The description of this group was recast in more geometrical terms by Kapranov (2012). The corresponding (much more involved) analysis for rational pure polarizable Hodge structures was done by Patrikis (2016).

Mixed Hodge structure in cohomology (Deligne's theorem) edit

Deligne has proved that the nth cohomology group of an arbitrary algebraic variety has a canonical mixed Hodge structure. This structure is functorial, and compatible with the products of varieties (Künneth isomorphism) and the product in cohomology. For a complete nonsingular variety X this structure is pure of weight n, and the Hodge filtration can be defined through the hypercohomology of the truncated de Rham complex.

The proof roughly consists of two parts, taking care of noncompactness and singularities. Both parts use the resolution of singularities (due to Hironaka) in an essential way. In the singular case, varieties are replaced by simplicial schemes, leading to more complicated homological algebra, and a technical notion of a Hodge structure on complexes (as opposed to cohomology) is used.

Using the theory of motives, it is possible to refine the weight filtration on the cohomology with rational coefficients to one with integral coefficients.[5]

Examples edit

  • The Tate–Hodge structure   is the Hodge structure with underlying   module given by   (a subgroup of  ), with   So it is pure of weight −2 by definition and it is the unique 1-dimensional pure Hodge structure of weight −2 up to isomorphisms. More generally, its nth tensor power is denoted by   it is 1-dimensional and pure of weight −2n.
  • The cohomology of a compact Kähler manifold has a Hodge structure, and the nth cohomology group is pure of weight n.
  • The cohomology of a complex variety (possibly singular or non-proper) has a mixed Hodge structure. This was shown for smooth varieties by Deligne (1971), Deligne (1971a) and in general by Deligne (1974).
  • For a projective variety   with normal crossing singularities there is a spectral sequence with a degenerate E2-page which computes all of its mixed Hodge structures. The E1-page has explicit terms with a differential coming from a simplicial set.[6]
  • Any smooth variety X admits a smooth compactification with complement a normal crossing divisor. The corresponding logarithmic forms can be used to describe the mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of X explicitly.[7]
  • The Hodge structure for a smooth projective hypersurface   of degree   was worked out explicitly by Griffiths in his "Period Integrals of Algebraic Manifolds" paper. If   is the polynomial defining the hypersurface   then the graded Jacobian quotient ring
     
    contains all of the information of the middle cohomology of  . He shows that
     
    For example, consider the K3 surface given by  , hence   and  . Then, the graded Jacobian ring is
     
    The isomorphism for the primitive cohomology groups then read
     
    hence
     
    Notice that   is the vector space spanned by
     
    which is 19-dimensional. There is an extra vector in   given by the Lefschetz class  . From the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem and Hodge duality, the rest of the cohomology is in   as is  -dimensional. Hence the Hodge diamond reads
    1
    00
    1201
    00
    1
  • We can also use the previous isomorphism to verify the genus of a degree   plane curve. Since   is a smooth curve and the Ehresmann fibration theorem guarantees that every other smooth curve of genus   is diffeomorphic, we have that the genus then the same. So, using the isomorphism of primitive cohomology with the graded part of the Jacobian ring, we see that
     
    This implies that the dimension is
     
    as desired.
  • The Hodge numbers for a complete intersection are also readily computable: there is a combinatorial formula found by Friedrich Hirzebruch.[8]

Applications edit

The machinery based on the notions of Hodge structure and mixed Hodge structure forms a part of still largely conjectural theory of motives envisaged by Alexander Grothendieck. Arithmetic information for nonsingular algebraic variety X, encoded by eigenvalue of Frobenius elements acting on its l-adic cohomology, has something in common with the Hodge structure arising from X considered as a complex algebraic variety. Sergei Gelfand and Yuri Manin remarked around 1988 in their Methods of homological algebra, that unlike Galois symmetries acting on other cohomology groups, the origin of "Hodge symmetries" is very mysterious, although formally, they are expressed through the action of the fairly uncomplicated group   on the de Rham cohomology. Since then, the mystery has deepened with the discovery and mathematical formulation of mirror symmetry.

Variation of Hodge structure edit

A variation of Hodge structure (Griffiths (1968), Griffiths (1968a), Griffiths (1970)) is a family of Hodge structures parameterized by a complex manifold X. More precisely a variation of Hodge structure of weight n on a complex manifold X consists of a locally constant sheaf S of finitely generated abelian groups on X, together with a decreasing Hodge filtration F on SOX, subject to the following two conditions:

  • The filtration induces a Hodge structure of weight n on each stalk of the sheaf S
  • (Griffiths transversality) The natural connection on SOX maps   into  

Here the natural (flat) connection on SOX induced by the flat connection on S and the flat connection d on OX, and OX is the sheaf of holomorphic functions on X, and   is the sheaf of 1-forms on X. This natural flat connection is a Gauss–Manin connection ∇ and can be described by the Picard–Fuchs equation.

A variation of mixed Hodge structure can be defined in a similar way, by adding a grading or filtration W to S. Typical examples can be found from algebraic morphisms  . For example,

 

has fibers

 

which are smooth plane curves of genus 10 for   and degenerate to a singular curve at   Then, the cohomology sheaves

 

give variations of mixed hodge structures.

Hodge modules edit

Hodge modules are a generalization of variation of Hodge structures on a complex manifold. They can be thought of informally as something like sheaves of Hodge structures on a manifold; the precise definition Saito (1989) is rather technical and complicated. There are generalizations to mixed Hodge modules, and to manifolds with singularities.

For each smooth complex variety, there is an abelian category of mixed Hodge modules associated with it. These behave formally like the categories of sheaves over the manifolds; for example, morphisms f between manifolds induce functors f, f*, f!, f! between (derived categories of) mixed Hodge modules similar to the ones for sheaves.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In terms of spectral sequences, see homological algebra, Hodge fitrations can be described as the following:
     
    using notations in #Definition of mixed Hodge structure. The important fact is that this is degenerate at the term E1, which means the Hodge–de Rham spectral sequence, and then the Hodge decomposition, depends only on the complex structure not Kähler metric on M.
  2. ^ More precisely, let S be the two-dimensional commutative real algebraic group defined as the Weil restriction of the multiplicative group from   to   in other words, if A is an algebra over   then the group S(A) of A-valued points of S is the multiplicative group of   Then   is the group   of non-zero complex numbers.
  3. ^ Durfee, Alan (1981). "A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory". Complex Analysis of Singularities: 48–63. hdl:2433/102472.
  4. ^ The second article titled Tannakian categories by Deligne and Milne concentrated to this topic.
  5. ^ Gillet, Henri; Soulé, Christophe (1996). "Descent, motives and K-theory". Journal für die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik. 1996 (478): 127–176. arXiv:alg-geom/9507013. Bibcode:1995alg.geom..7013G. doi:10.1515/crll.1996.478.127. MR 1409056. S2CID 16441433., section 3.1
  6. ^ Jones, B.F., "Deligne's Mixed Hodge Structure for Projective Varieties with only Normal Crossing Singularities" (PDF), Hodge Theory Working Seminar-Spring 2005
  7. ^ Nicolaescu, Liviu, "Mixed Hodge Structures on Smooth Algebraic Varieties" (PDF), Hodge Theory Working Seminar-Spring 2005
  8. ^ "Hodge diamond of complete intersections". Stack Exchange. December 14, 2013.

Introductory references edit

  • Debarre, Olivier, Periods and Moduli
  • Arapura, Donu, (PDF), pp. 120–123, archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-01-04 (Gives tools for computing hodge numbers using sheaf cohomology)
  • A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory
  • Dimca, Alexandru (1992). Singularities and Topology of Hypersurfaces. Universitext. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 240, 261. doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-4404-2. ISBN 0-387-97709-0. MR 1194180. S2CID 117095021. (Gives a formula and generators for mixed Hodge numbers of affine Milnor fiber of a weighted homogenous polynomial, and also a formula for complements of weighted homogeneous polynomials in a weighted projective space.)

Survey articles edit

  • Arapura, Donu (2006), Mixed Hodge Structures Associated to Geometric Variations (PDF), arXiv:math/0611837, Bibcode:2006math.....11837A

References edit

  • Deligne, Pierre (1971b), Travaux de Griffiths, Sem. Bourbaki Exp. 376, Lect. notes in math. Vol 180, pp. 213–235
  • Deligne, Pierre (1971), (PDF), Actes du Congrès International des Mathématiciens (Nice, 1970), vol. 1, Gauthier-Villars, pp. 425–430, MR 0441965, archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-02 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety.
  • Deligne, Pierre (1971a), Théorie de Hodge. II., Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. No. 40, pp. 5–57, MR 0498551 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety.
  • Deligne, Pierre (1974), Théorie de Hodge. III., Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. No. 44, pp. 5–77, MR 0498552 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety.
  • Deligne, Pierre (1994), "Structures de Hodge mixtes réelles", Motives (Seattle, WA, 1991), Part 1, Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, vol. 55, Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, pp. 509–514, MR 1265541
  • Deligne, Pierre; Milne, James (1982), "Tannakian categories", Hodge Cycles, Motives, and Shimura Varieties by Pierre Deligne, James S. Milne, Arthur Ogus, Kuang-yen Shih, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 900, Springer-Verlag, pp. 1–414. An annotated version of this article can be found on J. Milne's homepage.
  • Griffiths, Phillip (1968), "Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds I (Construction and Properties of the Modular Varieties)", American Journal of Mathematics, 90 (2): 568–626, doi:10.2307/2373545, JSTOR 2373545
  • Griffiths, Phillip (1968a), "Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds II (Local Study of the Period Mapping)", American Journal of Mathematics, 90 (3): 808–865, doi:10.2307/2373485, JSTOR 2373485
  • Griffiths, Phillip (1970), "Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds III. Some global differential-geometric properties of the period mapping.", Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS, 38: 228–296, doi:10.1007/BF02684654, S2CID 11443767
  • Kapranov, Mikhail (2012), "Real mixed Hodge structures", Journal of Noncommutative Geometry, 6 (2): 321–342, arXiv:0802.0215, doi:10.4171/jncg/93, MR 2914868, S2CID 56416260
  • Ovseevich, Alexander I. (2001) [1994], "Hodge structure", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Patrikis, Stefan (2016), "Mumford-Tate groups of polarizable Hodge structures", Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 144 (9): 3717–3729, arXiv:1302.1803, doi:10.1090/proc/13040, MR 3513533, S2CID 40142493
  • Saito, Morihiko (1989), Introduction to mixed Hodge modules. Actes du Colloque de Théorie de Hodge (Luminy, 1987)., Astérisque No. 179–180, pp. 145–162, MR 1042805
  • Schnell, Christian (2014), An Overview of Morihiko Saito's Theory of Mixed Hodge Modules (PDF), arXiv:1405.3096
  • Steenbrink, Joseph H.M. (2001) [1994], "Variation of Hodge structure", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press

hodge, structure, mathematics, named, after, hodge, algebraic, structure, level, linear, algebra, similar, that, hodge, theory, gives, cohomology, groups, smooth, compact, kähler, manifold, have, been, generalized, complex, varieties, even, they, singular, com. In mathematics a Hodge structure named after W V D Hodge is an algebraic structure at the level of linear algebra similar to the one that Hodge theory gives to the cohomology groups of a smooth and compact Kahler manifold Hodge structures have been generalized for all complex varieties even if they are singular and non complete in the form of mixed Hodge structures defined by Pierre Deligne 1970 A variation of Hodge structure is a family of Hodge structures parameterized by a manifold first studied by Phillip Griffiths 1968 All these concepts were further generalized to mixed Hodge modules over complex varieties by Morihiko Saito 1989 Contents 1 Hodge structures 1 1 Definition of Hodge structures 1 2 A Hodge structure 2 Mixed Hodge structures 2 1 Example of curves 2 2 Definition of mixed Hodge structure 2 3 Mixed Hodge structure in cohomology Deligne s theorem 3 Examples 4 Applications 5 Variation of Hodge structure 6 Hodge modules 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Introductory references 10 Survey articles 11 ReferencesHodge structures editDefinition of Hodge structures edit A pure Hodge structure of integer weight n consists of an abelian group HZ displaystyle H mathbb Z nbsp and a decomposition of its complexification H into a direct sum of complex subspaces Hp q displaystyle H p q nbsp where p q n displaystyle p q n nbsp with the property that the complex conjugate of Hp q displaystyle H p q nbsp is Hq p displaystyle H q p nbsp H HZ ZC p q nHp q displaystyle H H mathbb Z otimes mathbb Z mathbb C bigoplus nolimits p q n H p q nbsp Hp q Hq p displaystyle overline H p q H q p nbsp An equivalent definition is obtained by replacing the direct sum decomposition of H by the Hodge filtration a finite decreasing filtration of H by complex subspaces FpH p Z displaystyle F p H p in mathbb Z nbsp subject to the condition p q p q n 1 FpH FqH 0andFpH FqH H displaystyle forall p q p q n 1 qquad F p H cap overline F q H 0 quad text and quad F p H oplus overline F q H H nbsp The relation between these two descriptions is given as follows Hp q FpH FqH displaystyle H p q F p H cap overline F q H nbsp FpH i pHi n i displaystyle F p H bigoplus nolimits i geq p H i n i nbsp For example if X is a compact Kahler manifold HZ Hn X Z displaystyle H mathbb Z H n X mathbb Z nbsp is the n th cohomology group of X with integer coefficients then H Hn X C displaystyle H H n X mathbb C nbsp is its n th cohomology group with complex coefficients and Hodge theory provides the decomposition of H into a direct sum as above so that these data define a pure Hodge structure of weight n On the other hand the Hodge de Rham spectral sequence supplies Hn displaystyle H n nbsp with the decreasing filtration by FpH displaystyle F p H nbsp as in the second definition 1 For applications in algebraic geometry namely classification of complex projective varieties by their periods the set of all Hodge structures of weight n on HZ displaystyle H mathbb Z nbsp is too big Using the Riemann bilinear relations in this case called Hodge Riemann bilinear relations it can be substantially simplified A polarized Hodge structure of weight n consists of a Hodge structure HZ Hp q displaystyle H mathbb Z H p q nbsp and a non degenerate integer bilinear form Q on HZ displaystyle H mathbb Z nbsp polarization which is extended to H by linearity and satisfying the conditions Q f ps 1 nQ ps f Q f ps 0 for f Hp q ps Hp q p q ip qQ f f gt 0 for f Hp q f 0 displaystyle begin aligned Q varphi psi amp 1 n Q psi varphi Q varphi psi amp 0 amp amp text for varphi in H p q psi in H p q p neq q i p q Q left varphi bar varphi right amp gt 0 amp amp text for varphi in H p q varphi neq 0 end aligned nbsp In terms of the Hodge filtration these conditions imply that Q Fp Fn p 1 0 Q Cf f gt 0 for f 0 displaystyle begin aligned Q left F p F n p 1 right amp 0 Q left C varphi bar varphi right amp gt 0 amp amp text for varphi neq 0 end aligned nbsp where C is the Weil operator on H given by C ip q displaystyle C i p q nbsp on Hp q displaystyle H p q nbsp Yet another definition of a Hodge structure is based on the equivalence between the Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp grading on a complex vector space and the action of the circle group U 1 In this definition an action of the multiplicative group of complex numbers C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp viewed as a two dimensional real algebraic torus is given on H 2 This action must have the property that a real number a acts by an The subspace Hp q displaystyle H p q nbsp is the subspace on which z C displaystyle z in mathbb C nbsp acts as multiplication by zpz q displaystyle z p overline z q nbsp A Hodge structure edit In the theory of motives it becomes important to allow more general coefficients for the cohomology The definition of a Hodge structure is modified by fixing a Noetherian subring A of the field R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp of real numbers for which A ZR displaystyle mathbf A otimes mathbb Z mathbb R nbsp is a field Then a pure Hodge A structure of weight n is defined as before replacing Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp with A There are natural functors of base change and restriction relating Hodge A structures and B structures for A a subring of B Mixed Hodge structures editMain article Mixed Hodge structure It was noticed by Jean Pierre Serre in the 1960s based on the Weil conjectures that even singular possibly reducible and non complete algebraic varieties should admit virtual Betti numbers More precisely one should be able to assign to any algebraic variety X a polynomial PX t called its virtual Poincare polynomial with the properties If X is nonsingular and projective or complete PX t rank Hn X tn displaystyle P X t sum operatorname rank H n X t n nbsp If Y is closed algebraic subset of X and U X Y PX t PY t PU t displaystyle P X t P Y t P U t nbsp The existence of such polynomials would follow from the existence of an analogue of Hodge structure in the cohomologies of a general singular and non complete algebraic variety The novel feature is that the nth cohomology of a general variety looks as if it contained pieces of different weights This led Alexander Grothendieck to his conjectural theory of motives and motivated a search for an extension of Hodge theory which culminated in the work of Pierre Deligne He introduced the notion of a mixed Hodge structure developed techniques for working with them gave their construction based on Heisuke Hironaka s resolution of singularities and related them to the weights on l adic cohomology proving the last part of the Weil conjectures Example of curves edit To motivate the definition consider the case of a reducible complex algebraic curve X consisting of two nonsingular components X1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp and X2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp which transversally intersect at the points Q1 displaystyle Q 1 nbsp and Q2 displaystyle Q 2 nbsp Further assume that the components are not compact but can be compactified by adding the points P1 Pn displaystyle P 1 dots P n nbsp The first cohomology group of the curve X with compact support is dual to the first homology group which is easier to visualize There are three types of one cycles in this group First there are elements ai displaystyle alpha i nbsp representing small loops around the punctures Pi displaystyle P i nbsp Then there are elements bj displaystyle beta j nbsp that are coming from the first homology of the compactification of each of the components The one cycle in Xk X displaystyle X k subset X nbsp k 1 2 displaystyle k 1 2 nbsp corresponding to a cycle in the compactification of this component is not canonical these elements are determined modulo the span of a1 an displaystyle alpha 1 dots alpha n nbsp Finally modulo the first two types the group is generated by a combinatorial cycle g displaystyle gamma nbsp which goes from Q1 displaystyle Q 1 nbsp to Q2 displaystyle Q 2 nbsp along a path in one component X1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp and comes back along a path in the other component X2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp This suggests that H1 X displaystyle H 1 X nbsp admits an increasing filtration 0 W0 W1 W2 H1 X displaystyle 0 subset W 0 subset W 1 subset W 2 H 1 X nbsp whose successive quotients Wn Wn 1 originate from the cohomology of smooth complete varieties hence admit pure Hodge structures albeit of different weights Further examples can be found in A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory 3 Definition of mixed Hodge structure edit A mixed Hodge structure on an abelian group HZ displaystyle H mathbb Z nbsp consists of a finite decreasing filtration Fp on the complex vector space H the complexification of HZ displaystyle H mathbb Z nbsp called the Hodge filtration and a finite increasing filtration Wi on the rational vector space HQ HZ ZQ displaystyle H mathbb Q H mathbb Z otimes mathbb Z mathbb Q nbsp obtained by extending the scalars to rational numbers called the weight filtration subject to the requirement that the n th associated graded quotient of HQ displaystyle H mathbb Q nbsp with respect to the weight filtration together with the filtration induced by F on its complexification is a pure Hodge structure of weight n for all integer n Here the induced filtration on grnW H Wn C Wn 1 C displaystyle operatorname gr n W H W n otimes mathbb C W n 1 otimes mathbb C nbsp is defined by FpgrnW H Fp Wn C Wn 1 C Wn 1 C displaystyle F p operatorname gr n W H left F p cap W n otimes mathbb C W n 1 otimes mathbb C right W n 1 otimes mathbb C nbsp One can define a notion of a morphism of mixed Hodge structures which has to be compatible with the filtrations F and W and prove the following Theorem Mixed Hodge structures form an abelian category The kernels and cokernels in this category coincide with the usual kernels and cokernels in the category of vector spaces with the induced filtrations The total cohomology of a compact Kahler manifold has a mixed Hodge structure where the nth space of the weight filtration Wn is the direct sum of the cohomology groups with rational coefficients of degree less than or equal to n Therefore one can think of classical Hodge theory in the compact complex case as providing a double grading on the complex cohomology group which defines an increasing filtration Fp and a decreasing filtration Wn that are compatible in certain way In general the total cohomology space still has these two filtrations but they no longer come from a direct sum decomposition In relation with the third definition of the pure Hodge structure one can say that a mixed Hodge structure cannot be described using the action of the group C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp An important insight of Deligne is that in the mixed case there is a more complicated noncommutative proalgebraic group that can be used to the same effect using Tannakian formalism Moreover the category of mixed Hodge structures admits a good notion of tensor product corresponding to the product of varieties as well as related concepts of inner Hom and dual object making it into a Tannakian category By Tannaka Krein philosophy this category is equivalent to the category of finite dimensional representations of a certain group which Deligne Milne and et el has explicitly described see Deligne amp Milne 1982 4 and Deligne 1994 The description of this group was recast in more geometrical terms by Kapranov 2012 The corresponding much more involved analysis for rational pure polarizable Hodge structures was done by Patrikis 2016 Mixed Hodge structure in cohomology Deligne s theorem edit Deligne has proved that the nth cohomology group of an arbitrary algebraic variety has a canonical mixed Hodge structure This structure is functorial and compatible with the products of varieties Kunneth isomorphism and the product in cohomology For a complete nonsingular variety X this structure is pure of weight n and the Hodge filtration can be defined through the hypercohomology of the truncated de Rham complex The proof roughly consists of two parts taking care of noncompactness and singularities Both parts use the resolution of singularities due to Hironaka in an essential way In the singular case varieties are replaced by simplicial schemes leading to more complicated homological algebra and a technical notion of a Hodge structure on complexes as opposed to cohomology is used Using the theory of motives it is possible to refine the weight filtration on the cohomology with rational coefficients to one with integral coefficients 5 Examples editThe Tate Hodge structure Z 1 displaystyle mathbb Z 1 nbsp is the Hodge structure with underlying Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp module given by 2piZ displaystyle 2 pi i mathbb Z nbsp a subgroup of C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp with Z 1 C H 1 1 displaystyle mathbb Z 1 otimes mathbb C H 1 1 nbsp So it is pure of weight 2 by definition and it is the unique 1 dimensional pure Hodge structure of weight 2 up to isomorphisms More generally its nth tensor power is denoted by Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n nbsp it is 1 dimensional and pure of weight 2n The cohomology of a compact Kahler manifold has a Hodge structure and the nth cohomology group is pure of weight n The cohomology of a complex variety possibly singular or non proper has a mixed Hodge structure This was shown for smooth varieties by Deligne 1971 Deligne 1971a and in general by Deligne 1974 For a projective variety X displaystyle X nbsp with normal crossing singularities there is a spectral sequence with a degenerate E2 page which computes all of its mixed Hodge structures The E1 page has explicit terms with a differential coming from a simplicial set 6 Any smooth variety X admits a smooth compactification with complement a normal crossing divisor The corresponding logarithmic forms can be used to describe the mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of X explicitly 7 The Hodge structure for a smooth projective hypersurface X Pn 1 displaystyle X subset mathbb P n 1 nbsp of degree d displaystyle d nbsp was worked out explicitly by Griffiths in his Period Integrals of Algebraic Manifolds paper If f C x0 xn 1 displaystyle f in mathbb C x 0 ldots x n 1 nbsp is the polynomial defining the hypersurface X displaystyle X nbsp then the graded Jacobian quotient ring R f C x0 xn 1 f x0 f xn 1 displaystyle R f frac mathbb C x 0 ldots x n 1 left frac partial f partial x 0 ldots frac partial f partial x n 1 right nbsp contains all of the information of the middle cohomology of X displaystyle X nbsp He shows that Hp n p X prim R f n 1 p d n 2 displaystyle H p n p X text prim cong R f n 1 p d n 2 nbsp For example consider the K3 surface given by g x04 x34 displaystyle g x 0 4 cdots x 3 4 nbsp hence d 4 displaystyle d 4 nbsp and n 2 displaystyle n 2 nbsp Then the graded Jacobian ring is C x0 x1 x2 x3 x03 x13 x23 x33 displaystyle frac mathbb C x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 0 3 x 1 3 x 2 3 x 3 3 nbsp The isomorphism for the primitive cohomology groups then read Hp n p X prim R g 2 1 p 4 2 2 R g 4 3 p 4 displaystyle H p n p X prim cong R g 2 1 p 4 2 2 R g 4 3 p 4 nbsp hence H0 2 X prim R g 8 C x02x12x22x32H1 1 X prim R g 4H2 0 X prim R g 0 C 1 displaystyle begin aligned H 0 2 X text prim amp cong R g 8 mathbb C cdot x 0 2 x 1 2 x 2 2 x 3 2 H 1 1 X text prim amp cong R g 4 H 2 0 X text prim amp cong R g 0 mathbb C cdot 1 end aligned nbsp Notice that R g 4 displaystyle R g 4 nbsp is the vector space spanned by x02x12 x02x1x2 x02x1x3 x02x22 x02x2x3 x02x32 x0x12x2 x0x12x3 x0x1x22 x0x1x2x3 x0x1x32 x0x22x3 x0x2x32 x12x22 x12x2x3 x12x32 x1x22x3 x1x2x32 x22x32 displaystyle begin array rrrrrrrr x 0 2 x 1 2 amp x 0 2 x 1 x 2 amp x 0 2 x 1 x 3 amp x 0 2 x 2 2 amp x 0 2 x 2 x 3 amp x 0 2 x 3 2 amp x 0 x 1 2 x 2 amp x 0 x 1 2 x 3 x 0 x 1 x 2 2 amp x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 amp x 0 x 1 x 3 2 amp x 0 x 2 2 x 3 amp x 0 x 2 x 3 2 amp x 1 2 x 2 2 amp x 1 2 x 2 x 3 amp x 1 2 x 3 2 x 1 x 2 2 x 3 amp x 1 x 2 x 3 2 amp x 2 2 x 3 2 end array nbsp which is 19 dimensional There is an extra vector in H1 1 X displaystyle H 1 1 X nbsp given by the Lefschetz class L displaystyle L nbsp From the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem and Hodge duality the rest of the cohomology is in Hk k X displaystyle H k k X nbsp as is 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp dimensional Hence the Hodge diamond reads 1001201001 We can also use the previous isomorphism to verify the genus of a degree d displaystyle d nbsp plane curve Since xd yd zd displaystyle x d y d z d nbsp is a smooth curve and the Ehresmann fibration theorem guarantees that every other smooth curve of genus g displaystyle g nbsp is diffeomorphic we have that the genus then the same So using the isomorphism of primitive cohomology with the graded part of the Jacobian ring we see that H1 0 R f d 3 C x y z d 3 displaystyle H 1 0 cong R f d 3 cong mathbb C x y z d 3 nbsp This implies that the dimension is 2 d 32 d 12 d 1 d 2 2 displaystyle 2 d 3 choose 2 d 1 choose 2 frac d 1 d 2 2 nbsp as desired The Hodge numbers for a complete intersection are also readily computable there is a combinatorial formula found by Friedrich Hirzebruch 8 Applications editThe machinery based on the notions of Hodge structure and mixed Hodge structure forms a part of still largely conjectural theory of motives envisaged by Alexander Grothendieck Arithmetic information for nonsingular algebraic variety X encoded by eigenvalue of Frobenius elements acting on its l adic cohomology has something in common with the Hodge structure arising from X considered as a complex algebraic variety Sergei Gelfand and Yuri Manin remarked around 1988 in their Methods of homological algebra that unlike Galois symmetries acting on other cohomology groups the origin of Hodge symmetries is very mysterious although formally they are expressed through the action of the fairly uncomplicated group RC RC displaystyle R mathbf C R mathbf C nbsp on the de Rham cohomology Since then the mystery has deepened with the discovery and mathematical formulation of mirror symmetry Variation of Hodge structure editA variation of Hodge structure Griffiths 1968 Griffiths 1968a Griffiths 1970 is a family of Hodge structures parameterized by a complex manifold X More precisely a variation of Hodge structure of weight n on a complex manifold X consists of a locally constant sheaf S of finitely generated abelian groups on X together with a decreasing Hodge filtration F on S OX subject to the following two conditions The filtration induces a Hodge structure of weight n on each stalk of the sheaf S Griffiths transversality The natural connection on S OX maps Fn displaystyle F n nbsp into Fn 1 WX1 displaystyle F n 1 otimes Omega X 1 nbsp Here the natural flat connection on S OX induced by the flat connection on S and the flat connection d on OX and OX is the sheaf of holomorphic functions on X and WX1 displaystyle Omega X 1 nbsp is the sheaf of 1 forms on X This natural flat connection is a Gauss Manin connection and can be described by the Picard Fuchs equation A variation of mixed Hodge structure can be defined in a similar way by adding a grading or filtration W to S Typical examples can be found from algebraic morphisms f Cn C displaystyle f mathbb C n to mathbb C nbsp For example f C2 Cf x y y6 x6 displaystyle begin cases f mathbb C 2 to mathbb C f x y y 6 x 6 end cases nbsp has fibers Xt f 1 t x y C2 y6 x6 t displaystyle X t f 1 t left x y in mathbb C 2 y 6 x 6 t right nbsp which are smooth plane curves of genus 10 for t 0 displaystyle t neq 0 nbsp and degenerate to a singular curve at t 0 displaystyle t 0 nbsp Then the cohomology sheaves Rf i Q C2 displaystyle mathbb R f i left underline mathbb Q mathbb C 2 right nbsp give variations of mixed hodge structures Hodge modules editMain article Mixed Hodge module Hodge modules are a generalization of variation of Hodge structures on a complex manifold They can be thought of informally as something like sheaves of Hodge structures on a manifold the precise definition Saito 1989 is rather technical and complicated There are generalizations to mixed Hodge modules and to manifolds with singularities For each smooth complex variety there is an abelian category of mixed Hodge modules associated with it These behave formally like the categories of sheaves over the manifolds for example morphisms f between manifolds induce functors f f f f between derived categories of mixed Hodge modules similar to the ones for sheaves See also editMixed Hodge structure Hodge conjecture Jacobian ideal Hodge Tate structure a p adic analogue of Hodge structures Notes edit In terms of spectral sequences see homological algebra Hodge fitrations can be described as the following E1p q Hp q grnW H Hp q displaystyle E 1 p q H p q operatorname gr n W H Rightarrow H p q nbsp using notations in Definition of mixed Hodge structure The important fact is that this is degenerate at the term E1 which means the Hodge de Rham spectral sequence and then the Hodge decomposition depends only on the complex structure not Kahler metric on M More precisely let S be the two dimensional commutative real algebraic group defined as the Weil restriction of the multiplicative group from C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp to R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp in other words if A is an algebra over R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp then the group S A of A valued points of S is the multiplicative group of A C displaystyle A otimes mathbb C nbsp Then S R displaystyle S mathbb R nbsp is the group C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp of non zero complex numbers Durfee Alan 1981 A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory Complex Analysis of Singularities 48 63 hdl 2433 102472 The second article titled Tannakian categories by Deligne and Milne concentrated to this topic Gillet Henri Soule Christophe 1996 Descent motives and K theory Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik 1996 478 127 176 arXiv alg geom 9507013 Bibcode 1995alg geom 7013G doi 10 1515 crll 1996 478 127 MR 1409056 S2CID 16441433 section 3 1 Jones B F Deligne s Mixed Hodge Structure for Projective Varieties with only Normal Crossing Singularities PDF Hodge Theory Working Seminar Spring 2005 Nicolaescu Liviu Mixed Hodge Structures on Smooth Algebraic Varieties PDF Hodge Theory Working Seminar Spring 2005 Hodge diamond of complete intersections Stack Exchange December 14 2013 Introductory references editDebarre Olivier Periods and Moduli Arapura Donu Complex Algebraic Varieties and their Cohomology PDF pp 120 123 archived from the original PDF on 2020 01 04 Gives tools for computing hodge numbers using sheaf cohomology A Naive Guide to Mixed Hodge Theory Dimca Alexandru 1992 Singularities and Topology of Hypersurfaces Universitext New York Springer Verlag pp 240 261 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 4404 2 ISBN 0 387 97709 0 MR 1194180 S2CID 117095021 Gives a formula and generators for mixed Hodge numbers of affine Milnor fiber of a weighted homogenous polynomial and also a formula for complements of weighted homogeneous polynomials in a weighted projective space Survey articles editArapura Donu 2006 Mixed Hodge Structures Associated to Geometric Variations PDF arXiv math 0611837 Bibcode 2006math 11837AReferences editDeligne Pierre 1971b Travaux de Griffiths Sem Bourbaki Exp 376 Lect notes in math Vol 180 pp 213 235 Deligne Pierre 1971 Theorie de Hodge I PDF Actes du Congres International des Mathematiciens Nice 1970 vol 1 Gauthier Villars pp 425 430 MR 0441965 archived from the original PDF on 2015 04 02 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety Deligne Pierre 1971a Theorie de Hodge II Inst Hautes Etudes Sci Publ Math No 40 pp 5 57 MR 0498551 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety Deligne Pierre 1974 Theorie de Hodge III Inst Hautes Etudes Sci Publ Math No 44 pp 5 77 MR 0498552 This constructs a mixed Hodge structure on the cohomology of a complex variety Deligne Pierre 1994 Structures de Hodge mixtes reelles Motives Seattle WA 1991 Part 1 Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics vol 55 Providence RI American Mathematical Society pp 509 514 MR 1265541 Deligne Pierre Milne James 1982 Tannakian categories Hodge Cycles Motives and Shimura Varieties by Pierre Deligne James S Milne Arthur Ogus Kuang yen Shih Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol 900 Springer Verlag pp 1 414 An annotated version of this article can be found on J Milne s homepage Griffiths Phillip 1968 Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds I Construction and Properties of the Modular Varieties American Journal of Mathematics 90 2 568 626 doi 10 2307 2373545 JSTOR 2373545 Griffiths Phillip 1968a Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds II Local Study of the Period Mapping American Journal of Mathematics 90 3 808 865 doi 10 2307 2373485 JSTOR 2373485 Griffiths Phillip 1970 Periods of integrals on algebraic manifolds III Some global differential geometric properties of the period mapping Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 38 228 296 doi 10 1007 BF02684654 S2CID 11443767 Kapranov Mikhail 2012 Real mixed Hodge structures Journal of Noncommutative Geometry 6 2 321 342 arXiv 0802 0215 doi 10 4171 jncg 93 MR 2914868 S2CID 56416260 Ovseevich Alexander I 2001 1994 Hodge structure Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Patrikis Stefan 2016 Mumford Tate groups of polarizable Hodge structures Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society 144 9 3717 3729 arXiv 1302 1803 doi 10 1090 proc 13040 MR 3513533 S2CID 40142493 Saito Morihiko 1989 Introduction to mixed Hodge modules Actes du Colloque de Theorie de Hodge Luminy 1987 Asterisque No 179 180 pp 145 162 MR 1042805 Schnell Christian 2014 An Overview of Morihiko Saito s Theory of Mixed Hodge Modules PDF arXiv 1405 3096 Steenbrink Joseph H M 2001 1994 Variation of Hodge structure Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hodge structure amp oldid 1145518742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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