124 research outputs found
Ramification theory for varieties over a local field
We define generalizations of classical invariants of wild ramification for
coverings on a variety of arbitrary dimension over a local field. For an l-adic
sheaf, we define its Swan class as a 0-cycle class supported on the wild
ramification locus. We prove a formula of Riemann-Roch type for the Swan
conductor of cohomology together with its relative version, assuming that the
local field is of mixed characteristic.
We also prove the integrality of the Swan class for curves over a local field
as a generalization of the Hasse-Arf theorem. We derive a proof of a conjecture
of Serre on the Artin character for a group action with an isolated fixed point
on a regular local ring, assuming the dimension is 2.Comment: 159 pages, some corrections are mad
Relations between some invariants of algebraic varieties in positive characteristic
We discuss relations between certain invariants of varieties in positive
characteristic, like the a-number and the height of the Artin-Mazur formal
group. We calculate the a-number for Fermat surfacesComment: 13 page
On the subdivision of small categories
We present an intrinsic and concrete development of the subdivision of small
categories, give some simple examples and derive its fundamental properties. As
an application, we deduce an alternative way to compare the homotopy categories
of spaces and small categories, by using partially ordered sets. This yields a
new conceptual proof to the well-known fact that these two homotopy categories
are equivalent.Comment: 15 page
On the vanishing of negative K-groups
Let k be an infinite perfect field of positive characteristic p and assume
that strong resolution of singularities holds over k. We prove that, if X is a
d-dimensional noetherian scheme whose underlying reduced scheme is essentially
of finite type over the field k, then the negative K-group K_q(X) vanishes for
every q < -d. This partially affirms a conjecture of Weibel.Comment: Math. Ann. (to appear
Abel-Jacobi maps for hypersurfaces and non commutative Calabi-Yau's
It is well known that the Fano scheme of lines on a cubic 4-fold is a
symplectic variety. We generalize this fact by constructing a closed p-form
with p=2n-4 on the Fano scheme of lines on a (2n-2)-dimensional hypersurface Y
of degree n. We provide several definitions of this form - via the Abel-Jacobi
map, via Hochschild homology, and via the linkage class, and compute it
explicitly for n = 4. In the special case of a Pfaffian hypersurface Y we show
that the Fano scheme is birational to a certain moduli space of sheaves on a
p-dimensional Calabi--Yau variety X arising naturally in the context of
homological projective duality, and that the constructed form is induced by the
holomorphic volume form on X. This remains true for a general non Pfaffian
hypersurface but the dual Calabi-Yau becomes non commutative.Comment: 34 pages; exposition of Hochschild homology expanded; references
added; introduction re-written; some imrecisions, typos and the orbit diagram
in the last section correcte
The groupoidal analogue Theta~ to Joyal's category Theta is a test category
We introduce the groupoidal analogue \tilde\Theta to Joyal's cell category
\Theta and we prove that \tilde\Theta is a strict test category in the sense of
Grothendieck. This implies that presheaves on \tilde\Theta model homotopy types
in a canonical way. We also prove that the canonical functor from \Theta to
\tilde\Theta is aspherical, again in the sense of Grothendieck. This allows us
to compare weak equivalences of presheaves on \tilde\Theta to weak equivalences
of presheaves on \Theta. Our proofs apply to other categories analogous to
\Theta.Comment: 41 pages, v2: references added, Remark 7.3 added, v3: metadata
update
Six operations and Lefschetz-Verdier formula for Deligne-Mumford stacks
Laszlo and Olsson constructed Grothendieck's six operations for constructible
complexes on Artin stacks in \'etale cohomology under an assumption of finite
cohomological dimension, with base change established on the level of sheaves.
In this article we give a more direct construction of the six operations for
complexes on Deligne-Mumford stacks without the finiteness assumption and
establish base change theorems in derived categories. One key tool in our
construction is the theory of gluing finitely many pseudofunctors developed in
arXiv:1211.1877. As an application, we prove a Lefschetz-Verdier formula for
Deligne-Mumford stacks. We include both torsion and -adic coefficients.Comment: 62 pages. v5, v4: minor improvements; v3: added a Lefschetz-Verdier
formula; v2: moved the appendix in v1 to arXiv:1211.187
Log Fano varieties over function fields of curves
Consider a smooth log Fano variety over the function field of a curve.
Suppose that the boundary has positive normal bundle. Choose an integral model
over the curve. Then integral points are Zariski dense, after removing an
explicit finite set of points on the base curve.Comment: 18 page
On some congruence properties of elliptic curves
In this paper, as a result of a theorem of Serre on congruence properties, a
complete solution is given for an open question (see the text) presented
recently by Kim, Koo and Park. Some further questions and results on similar
types of congruence properties of elliptic curves are also presented and
discussed.Comment: 11 pages, The title is changed. Thanks to a result of J.-P. Serre
from his letter on June 15, 2009 to the author, a complete solution for an
open question of Kim, Koo and Park is obtained in this fifth revised version.
Some related questions and results are also presented and discusse
Conjugacy theorems for loop reductive group schemes and Lie algebras
The conjugacy of split Cartan subalgebras in the finite dimensional simple
case (Chevalley) and in the symmetrizable Kac-Moody case (Peterson-Kac) are
fundamental results of the theory of Lie algebras. Among the Kac-Moody Lie
algebras the affine algebras stand out. This paper deals with the problem of
conjugacy for a class of algebras --extended affine Lie algebras-- that are in
a precise sense higher nullity analogues of the affine algebras. Unlike the
methods used by Peterson-Kac, our approach is entirely cohomological and
geometric. It is deeply rooted on the theory of reductive group schemes
developed by Demazure and Grothendieck, and on the work of J. Tits on buildingsComment: Publi\'e dans Bulletin of Mathematical Sciences 4 (2014), 281-32
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