13 research outputs found
Toric Stacks I: The Theory of Stacky Fans
The purpose of this paper and its sequel (Toric Stacks II) is to introduce
and develop a theory of toric stacks which encompasses and extends the notions
of toric stacks defined in [Laf02, BCS05, FMN10, Iwa09, Sat12, Tyo12], as well
as classical toric varieties.
In this paper, we define a \emph{toric stack} as a quotient of a toric
variety by a subgroup of its torus (we also define a generically stacky
version). Any toric stack arises from a combinatorial gadget called a
\emph{stacky fan}. We develop a dictionary between the combinatorics of stacky
fans and the geometry of toric stacks, stressing stacky phenomena such as
canonical stacks and good moduli space morphisms.
We also show that smooth toric stacks carry a moduli interpretation extending
the usual moduli interpretations of and
. Indeed, smooth toric stacks precisely solve
moduli problems specified by (generalized) effective Cartier divisors with
given linear relations and given intersection relations. Smooth toric stacks
therefore form a natural closure to the class of moduli problems introduced for
smooth toric varieties and smooth toric DM stacks in [Cox95] and [Per08],
respectively.
We include a plethora of examples to illustrate the general theory. We hope
that this theory of toric stacks can serve as a companion to an introduction to
stacks, in much the same way that toric varieties can serve as a companion to
an introduction to schemes.Comment: 36 pages (update to match published version
Formal GAGA for good moduli spaces
We prove formal GAGA for good moduli space morphisms under an assumption of
"enough vector bundles" (which holds for instance for quotient stacks). This
supports the philosophy that though they are non-separated, good moduli space
morphisms largely behave like proper morphisms.Comment: 16 pages (updated to match published numbering
Toric Stacks II: Intrinsic Characterization of Toric Stacks
The purpose of this paper and its prequel (Toric Stacks I) is to introduce
and develop a theory of toric stacks which encompasses and extends the notions
of toric stacks defined in [Laf02, BCS05, FMN10, Iwa09, Sat12, Tyo12], as well
as classical toric varieties.
While the focus of the prequel is on how to work with toric stacks, the focus
of this paper is how to show a stack is toric. For toric varieties, a classical
result says that any normal variety with an action of a dense open torus arises
from a fan. In [FMN09, Theorem 7.24], it is shown that a smooth separated DM
stack with an action of a dense open stacky torus arises from a stacky fan. In
the same spirit, the main result of this paper is that any Artin stack with an
action of a dense open torus arises from a stacky fan under reasonable
hypotheses.Comment: 20 pages (update to match published version
There is no degree map for 0-cycles on Artin stacks
We show that there is no way to define degrees of 0-cycles on Artin stacks
with proper good moduli spaces so that (i) the degree of an ordinary point is
non-zero, and (ii) degrees are compatible with closed immersions.Comment: 3 page
When is a variety a quotient of a smooth variety by a finite group?
Non UBCUnreviewedAuthor affiliation: California Institute of TechnologyPostdoctora
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Toric Stacks
The first purpose of this dissertation is to introduce and develop a theory of toric stacks which encompasses and extends the notions of toric stacks defined by Lafforgue, Borisov-Chen-Smith, Fantechi-Mann-Nironi, Iwanari, and Satriano, as well as classical toric varieties. In addition to introducing a broader class of smooth toric stacks, the definition we introduce allows singularities. The second purpose is to characterize toric stacks in a "bottom up" fashion, similar to the treatment of smooth toric Deligne-Mumford stacks by Fantechi-Mann-Nironi and the characterization of toric varieties as "abstract toric schemes" which are reduced, separated, and normal