124 research outputs found

    A brief note concerning hard Lefschetz for Chow groups

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    We formulate a conjectural hard Lefschetz property for Chow groups, and prove this in some special cases: roughly speaking, for varieties with finite-dimensional motive, and for varieties whose self-product has vanishing middle-dimensional Griffiths group. An appendix includes related statements that follow from results of Vial.Comment: 15 pages. Comments welcome ! To appear (in slightly different version) in Canadian Math. Bulleti

    A family of cubic fourfolds with finite-dimensional motive

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    We prove that cubic fourfolds in a certain 10-dimensional family have finite-dimensional motive. The proof is based on the van Geemen-Izadi construction of an algebraic Kuga-Satake correspondence for these cubic fourfolds, combined with Voisin's method of "spread". Some consequences are given.Comment: 19 pages, to appear in Journal Math. Soc. Japan, comments vey welcom

    On Voisin's conjecture for zero-cycles on hyperkaehler varieties

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    Motivated by the Bloch-Beilinson conjectures, Voisin has made a conjecture concerning zero-cycles on self-products of Calabi-Yau varieties. We reformulate Voisin's conjecture in the setting of hyperk\"ahler varieties, and we prove this reformulated conjecture for one family of hyperk\"ahler fourfolds.Comment: 10 pages, to appear in Journal Korean Math. Soc., comments very welcome !. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1704.01083, arXiv:1703.0399

    Some elementary examples of quartics with finite-dimensional motive

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    This small note contains some easy examples of quartic hypersurfaces that have finite-dimensional motive. As an illustration, we verify a conjecture of Voevodsky (concerning smash-equivalence) for some of these special quartics.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in Annali dell'Universita di Ferrara, comments welcome ! arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1611.0881

    A remark on Beauville's splitting property

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    Let XX be a hyperk\"ahler variety. Beauville has conjectured that a certain subring of the Chow ring of XX should inject into cohomology. This note proposes a similar conjecture for the ring of algebraic cycles on XX modulo algebraic equivalence: a certain subring (containing divisors and codimension 22 cycles) should inject into cohomology. We present some evidence for this conjecture.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in Manuscr. Math., comments very welcom

    Bloch's conjecture for Enriques varieties

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    Enriques varieties have been defined as higher-dimensional generalizations of Enriques surfaces. Bloch's conjecture implies that Enriques varieties should have trivial Chow group of zero-cycles. We prove this is the case for all known examples of irreducible Enriques varieties of index larger than 22. The proof is based on results concerning the Chow motive of generalized Kummer varieties.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in Osaka J. Math., comments welcom

    About Chow groups of certain hyperk\"ahler varieties with non-symplectic automorphisms

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    Let XX be a hyperk\"ahler variety, and let GG be a group of finite order non-symplectic automorphisms of XX. Beauville's conjectural splitting property predicts that each Chow group of XX should split in a finite number of pieces. The Bloch-Beilinson conjectures predict how GG should act on these pieces of the Chow groups: certain pieces should be invariant under GG, while certain other pieces should not contain any non-trivial GG-invariant cycle. We can prove this for two pieces of the Chow groups when XX is the Hilbert scheme of a K3K3 surface and GG consists of natural automorphisms. This has consequences for the Chow ring of the quotient X/GX/G.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in Vietnam J. Math., comments welcom

    Correspondences and singular varieties

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    What is generally known as the "Bloch--Srinivas method" consists of decomposing the diagonal of a smooth projective variety, and then considering the action of correspondences in cohomology. In this note, we observe that this same method can also be extended to singular and quasi--projective varieties. We give two applications of this observation: the first is a version of Mumford's theorem, the second is concerned with the Hodge conjecture for singular varieties.Comment: 11 pages. Comments welcome ! To appear in Monatsh. Math. (in slightly different version). arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1507.0448
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