Canonical Sheaf
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the canonical bundle of a non-singular algebraic variety V of dimension n over a field is the
line bundle In mathematics, a line bundle expresses the concept of a line that varies from point to point of a space. For example, a curve in the plane having a tangent line at each point determines a varying line: the ''tangent bundle'' is a way of organisin ...
\,\!\Omega^n = \omega, which is the ''n''th exterior power of the
cotangent bundle In mathematics, especially differential geometry, the cotangent bundle of a smooth manifold is the vector bundle of all the cotangent spaces at every point in the manifold. It may be described also as the dual bundle to the tangent bundle. This may ...
Ω on ''V''. Over the complex numbers, it is the determinant bundle of holomorphic ''n''-forms on ''V''. This is the dualising object for Serre duality on ''V''. It may equally well be considered as an invertible sheaf. The canonical class is the
divisor class In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier and André Weil by David Mum ...
of a
Cartier divisor In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier and André Weil by David Mum ...
''K'' on ''V'' giving rise to the canonical bundle — it is an
equivalence class In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
for
linear equivalence In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier (mathematician), Pierre Cartier ...
on ''V'', and any divisor in it may be called a canonical divisor. An anticanonical divisor is any divisor −''K'' with ''K'' canonical. The anticanonical bundle is the corresponding
inverse bundle In mathematics, the inverse bundle of a fibre bundle is its inverse with respect to the Whitney sum operation. Let E \rightarrow M be a fibre bundle. A bundle E' \rightarrow M is called the ''inverse bundle'' of E if their Whitney sum is a trivia ...
ω−1. When the anticanonical bundle of V is ample, V is called a Fano variety.


The adjunction formula

Suppose that ''X'' is a smooth variety and that ''D'' is a smooth divisor on ''X''. The adjunction formula relates the canonical bundles of ''X'' and ''D''. It is a natural isomorphism :\omega_D = i^*(\omega_X \otimes \mathcal(D)). In terms of canonical classes, it is :K_D = (K_X + D), _D. This formula is one of the most powerful formulas in algebraic geometry. An important tool of modern birational geometry is inversion of adjunction, which allows one to deduce results about the singularities of ''X'' from the singularities of ''D''.


Singular case

On a singular variety X, there are several ways to define the canonical divisor. If the variety is normal, it is smooth in codimension one. In particular, we can define canonical divisor on the smooth locus. This gives us a unique
Weil divisor In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier (mathematician), Pierre Cartier ...
class on X. It is this class, denoted by K_X that is referred to as the canonical divisor on X. Alternately, again on a normal variety X, one can consider h^(\omega^._X), the -d'th cohomology of the normalized dualizing complex of X. This sheaf corresponds to a
Weil divisor In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier (mathematician), Pierre Cartier ...
class, which is equal to the divisor class K_X defined above. In the absence of the normality hypothesis, the same result holds if X is S2 and Gorenstein in dimension one.


Canonical maps

If the canonical class is effective, then it determines a rational map from ''V'' into projective space. This map is called the canonical map. The rational map determined by the ''n''th multiple of the canonical class is the ''n''-canonical map. The ''n''-canonical map sends ''V'' into a projective space of dimension one less than the dimension of the global sections of the ''n''th multiple of the canonical class. ''n''-canonical maps may have base points, meaning that they are not defined everywhere (i.e., they may not be a morphism of varieties). They may have positive dimensional fibers, and even if they have zero-dimensional fibers, they need not be local analytic isomorphisms.


Canonical curves

The best studied case is that of curves. Here, the canonical bundle is the same as the (holomorphic)
cotangent bundle In mathematics, especially differential geometry, the cotangent bundle of a smooth manifold is the vector bundle of all the cotangent spaces at every point in the manifold. It may be described also as the dual bundle to the tangent bundle. This may ...
. A global section of the canonical bundle is therefore the same as an everywhere-regular differential form. Classically, these were called
differentials of the first kind In mathematics, ''differential of the first kind'' is a traditional term used in the theories of Riemann surfaces (more generally, complex manifolds) and algebraic curves (more generally, algebraic varieties), for everywhere-regular differential 1 ...
. The degree of the canonical class is 2''g'' − 2 for a curve of genus ''g''.


Low genus

Suppose that ''C'' is a smooth algebraic curve of genus ''g''. If ''g'' is zero, then ''C'' is P1, and the canonical class is the class of −2''P'', where ''P'' is any point of ''C''. This follows from the calculus formula ''d''(1/''t'') = −''dt''/''t''2, for example, a meromorphic differential with double pole at the point at infinity on the Riemann sphere. In particular, ''K''''C'' and its multiples are not effective. If ''g'' is one, then ''C'' is an elliptic curve, and ''K''''C'' is the trivial bundle. The global sections of the trivial bundle form a one-dimensional vector space, so the ''n''-canonical map for any ''n'' is the map to a point.


Hyperelliptic case

If ''C'' has genus two or more, then the canonical class is big, so the image of any ''n''-canonical map is a curve. The image of the 1-canonical map is called a canonical curve. A canonical curve of genus ''g'' always sits in a projective space of dimension ''g'' − 1. When ''C'' is a hyperelliptic curve, the canonical curve is a rational normal curve, and ''C'' a double cover of its canonical curve. For example if ''P'' is a polynomial of degree 6 (without repeated roots) then :''y''2 = ''P''(''x'') is an affine curve representation of a genus 2 curve, necessarily hyperelliptic, and a basis of the differentials of the first kind is given in the same notation by :''dx''/,   ''x dx''/. This means that the canonical map is given by homogeneous coordinates : ''x''as a morphism to the projective line. The rational normal curve for higher genus hyperelliptic curves arises in the same way with higher power monomials in ''x''.


General case

Otherwise, for non-hyperelliptic ''C'' which means ''g'' is at least 3, the morphism is an isomorphism of ''C'' with its image, which has degree 2''g'' − 2. Thus for ''g'' = 3 the canonical curves (non-hyperelliptic case) are quartic plane curves. All non-singular plane quartics arise in this way. There is explicit information for the case ''g'' = 4, when a canonical curve is an intersection of a quadric and a cubic surface; and for ''g'' = 5 when it is an intersection of three quadrics. There is a converse, which is a corollary to the Riemann–Roch theorem: a non-singular curve ''C'' of genus ''g'' embedded in projective space of dimension ''g'' − 1 as a linearly normal curve of degree 2''g'' − 2 is a canonical curve, provided its linear span is the whole space. In fact the relationship between canonical curves ''C'' (in the non-hyperelliptic case of ''g'' at least 3), Riemann-Roch, and the theory of
special divisor Special or specials may refer to: Policing * Specials, Ulster Special Constabulary, the Northern Ireland police force * Specials, Special Constable, an auxiliary, volunteer, or temporary; police worker or police officer Literature * ''Specia ...
s is rather close. Effective divisors ''D'' on ''C'' consisting of distinct points have a linear span in the canonical embedding with dimension directly related to that of the linear system in which they move; and with some more discussion this applies also to the case of points with multiplicities. More refined information is available, for larger values of ''g'', but in these cases canonical curves are not generally
complete intersection In mathematics, an algebraic variety ''V'' in projective space is a complete intersection if the ideal of ''V'' is generated by exactly ''codim V'' elements. That is, if ''V'' has dimension ''m'' and lies in projective space ''P'n'', there sho ...
s, and the description requires more consideration of commutative algebra. The field started with Max Noether's theorem: the dimension of the space of quadrics passing through ''C'' as embedded as canonical curve is (''g'' − 2)(''g'' − 3)/2. Petri's theorem, often cited under this name and published in 1923 by Karl Petri (1881–1955), states that for ''g'' at least 4 the homogeneous ideal defining the canonical curve is generated by its elements of degree 2, except for the cases of (a) trigonal curves and (b) non-singular plane quintics when ''g'' = 6. In the exceptional cases, the ideal is generated by the elements of degrees 2 and 3. Historically speaking, this result was largely known before Petri, and has been called the theorem of Babbage-Chisini-Enriques (for Dennis Babbage who completed the proof, Oscar Chisini and Federigo Enriques). The terminology is confused, since the result is also called the Noether–Enriques theorem. Outside the hyperelliptic cases, Noether proved that (in modern language) the canonical bundle is
normally generated In algebraic geometry, the homogeneous coordinate ring ''R'' of an algebraic variety ''V'' given as a subvariety of projective space of a given dimension ''N'' is by definition the quotient ring :''R'' = ''K'' 'X''0, ''X''1, ''X''2, ..., ''X'N' ...
: the symmetric powers of the space of sections of the canonical bundle map onto the sections of its tensor powers. This implies for instance the generation of the quadratic differentials on such curves by the differentials of the first kind; and this has consequences for the
local Torelli theorem Local may refer to: Geography and transportation * Local (train), a train serving local traffic demand * Local, Missouri, a community in the United States * Local government, a form of public administration, usually the lowest tier of administrat ...
. Petri's work actually provided explicit quadratic and cubic generators of the ideal, showing that apart from the exceptions the cubics could be expressed in terms of the quadratics. In the exceptional cases the intersection of the quadrics through the canonical curve is respectively a ruled surface and a Veronese surface. These classical results were proved over the complex numbers, but modern discussion shows that the techniques work over fields of any characteristic.


Canonical rings

The canonical ring of ''V'' is the graded ring :R = \bigoplus_^\infty H^0(V, K_V^d). If the canonical class of ''V'' is an ample line bundle, then the canonical ring is the homogeneous coordinate ring of the image of the canonical map. This can be true even when the canonical class of ''V'' is not ample. For instance, if ''V'' is a hyperelliptic curve, then the canonical ring is again the homogeneous coordinate ring of the image of the canonical map. In general, if the ring above is finitely generated, then it is elementary to see that it is the homogeneous coordinate ring of the image of a ''k''-canonical map, where ''k'' is any sufficiently divisible positive integer. The minimal model program proposed that the canonical ring of every smooth or mildly singular projective variety was finitely generated. In particular, this was known to imply the existence of a canonical model, a particular birational model of ''V'' with mild singularities that could be constructed by blowing down ''V''. When the canonical ring is finitely generated, the canonical model is Proj of the canonical ring. If the canonical ring is not finitely generated, then is not a variety, and so it cannot be birational to ''V''; in particular, ''V'' admits no canonical model. A fundamental theorem of Birkar-Cascini-Hacon-McKernan from 2006 is that the canonical ring of a smooth or mildly singular projective algebraic variety is finitely generated. The Kodaira dimension of ''V'' is the dimension of the canonical ring minus one. Here the dimension of the canonical ring may be taken to mean Krull dimension or transcendence degree.


See also

* Birational geometry *
Differential form In mathematics, differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications, ...


Notes

{{Reflist Vector bundles Algebraic varieties