Enriques–Kodaira Classification
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In mathematics, the Enriques–Kodaira classification is a classification of
compact Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty; in more specific cases it may refer to: * Interstate compact * Blood compact, an ancient ritual of the Philippines * Compact government, a type of colonial rule utilized in British ...
complex surfaces into ten classes. For each of these classes, the surfaces in the class can be parametrized by a moduli space. For most of the classes the moduli spaces are well understood, but for the class of surfaces of general type the moduli spaces seem too complicated to describe explicitly, though some components are known.
Max Noether Max Noether (24 September 1844 – 13 December 1921) was a German mathematician who worked on algebraic geometry and the theory of algebraic functions. He has been called "one of the finest mathematicians of the nineteenth century". He was the f ...
began the systematic study of algebraic surfaces, and
Guido Castelnuovo Guido Castelnuovo (14 August 1865 – 27 April 1952) was an Italian mathematician. He is best known for his contributions to the field of algebraic geometry, though his contributions to the study of statistics and probability theory are also sign ...
proved important parts of the classification. described the classification of complex projective surfaces. later extended the classification to include non-algebraic compact surfaces. The analogous classification of surfaces in positive characteristic was begun by and completed by ; it is similar to the characteristic 0 projective case, except that one also gets singular and supersingular Enriques surfaces in characteristic 2, and quasi-hyperelliptic surfaces in characteristics 2 and 3.


Statement of the classification

The Enriques–Kodaira classification of compact complex surfaces states that every nonsingular minimal compact complex surface is of exactly one of the 10 types listed on this page; in other words, it is one of the rational, ruled (genus > 0), type VII, K3, Enriques, Kodaira, toric, hyperelliptic, properly quasi-elliptic, or general type surfaces. For the 9 classes of surfaces other than general type, there is a fairly complete description of what all the surfaces look like (which for class VII depends on the global spherical shell conjecture, still unproved in 2009). For surfaces of general type not much is known about their explicit classification, though many examples have been found. The classification of algebraic surfaces in positive characteristic (, ) is similar to that of algebraic surfaces in characteristic 0, except that there are no Kodaira surfaces or surfaces of type VII, and there are some extra families of Enriques surfaces in characteristic 2, and hyperelliptic surfaces in characteristics 2 and 3, and in Kodaira dimension 1 in characteristics 2 and 3 one also allows quasielliptic fibrations. These extra families can be understood as follows: In characteristic 0 these surfaces are the quotients of surfaces by finite groups, but in finite characteristics it is also possible to take quotients by finite
group scheme In mathematics, a group scheme is a type of object from algebraic geometry equipped with a composition law. Group schemes arise naturally as symmetries of schemes, and they generalize algebraic groups, in the sense that all algebraic groups have ...
s that are not étale.
Oscar Zariski , birth_date = , birth_place = Kobrin, Russian Empire , death_date = , death_place = Brookline, Massachusetts, United States , nationality = American , field = Mathematics , work_institutions = ...
constructed some surfaces in positive characteristic that are unirational but not rational, derived from
inseparable extension In field theory, a branch of algebra, an algebraic field extension E/F is called a separable extension if for every \alpha\in E, the minimal polynomial of \alpha over is a separable polynomial (i.e., its formal derivative is not the zero polynom ...
s ( Zariski surfaces). In positive characteristic Serre showed that h^0(\Omega) may differ from h^1(\mathcal), and Igusa showed that even when they are equal they may be greater than the irregularity (the dimension of the
Picard variety In mathematics, the Picard group of a ringed space ''X'', denoted by Pic(''X''), is the group of isomorphism classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles) on ''X'', with the group operation being tensor product. This construction is a global v ...
).


Invariants of surfaces


Hodge numbers and Kodaira dimension

The most important invariants of a compact complex surfaces used in the classification can be given in terms of the dimensions of various
coherent sheaf cohomology In mathematics, especially in algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, coherent sheaf cohomology is a technique for producing functions with specified properties. Many geometric questions can be formulated as questions about the ex ...
groups. The basic ones are the
plurigenera In mathematics, the pluricanonical ring of an algebraic variety ''V'' (which is non-singular), or of a complex manifold, is the graded ring :R(V,K)=R(V,K_V) \, of sections of powers of the canonical bundle ''K''. Its ''n''th graded component (f ...
and the Hodge numbers defined as follows: * ''K'' is the
canonical line bundle In mathematics, the canonical bundle of a non-singular algebraic variety V of dimension n over a field is the line bundle \,\!\Omega^n = \omega, which is the ''n''th exterior power of the cotangent bundle Ω on ''V''. Over the complex numbers, it ...
whose sections are the holomorphic 2-forms. * P_n = \dim H^0(K^n), n \geqslant 1 are called the plurigenera. They are
birational In mathematics, birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower-dimensional subsets. This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rational f ...
invariants, i.e., invariant under blowing up. Using
Seiberg–Witten theory In theoretical physics, Seiberg–Witten theory is a theory that determines an exact low-energy effective action (for massless degrees of freedom) of a \mathcal = 2 supersymmetric gauge theory—namely the metric of the moduli space of vacua. ...
, Robert Friedman and John Morgan showed that for complex manifolds they only depend on the underlying oriented smooth 4-manifold. For non-Kähler surfaces the plurigenera are determined by the fundamental group, but for Kähler surfaces there are examples of surfaces that are homeomorphic but have different plurigenera and Kodaira dimensions. The individual plurigenera are not often used; the most important thing about them is their growth rate, measured by the
Kodaira dimension In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
. * \kappa is the
Kodaira dimension In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
: it is -\infty (sometimes written −1) if the plurigenera are all 0, and is otherwise the smallest number (0, 1, or 2 for surfaces) such that P_n/n^ is bounded. Enriques did not use this definition: instead he used the values of P_ and K \cdot K = c_1^2. These determine the Kodaira dimension given the following correspondence: ::\begin \kappa = -\infty &\longleftrightarrow P_ = 0 \\ \kappa = 0 &\longleftrightarrow P_ = 1 \\ \kappa = 1 &\longleftrightarrow P_ > 1 \text K\cdot K = 0 \\ \kappa = 2 &\longleftrightarrow P_ > 1 \text K\cdot K > 0 \\ \end * h^ = \dim H^j(X, \Omega^i), where \Omega^i is the sheaf of
holomorphic In mathematics, a holomorphic function is a complex-valued function of one or more complex variables that is complex differentiable in a neighbourhood of each point in a domain in complex coordinate space . The existence of a complex derivati ...
''i''-forms, are the Hodge numbers, often arranged in the Hodge diamond: ::\begin & & h^ & & \\ & h^ & & h^ & \\ h^ & & h^ & & h^\\ & h^ & & h^ & \\ & & h^ & & \\ \end :By
Serre duality In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, Serre duality is a duality for the coherent sheaf cohomology of algebraic varieties, proved by Jean-Pierre Serre. The basic version applies to vector bundles on a smooth projective variety, but Al ...
h^ = h^ and h^ =h^ =1. The Hodge numbers of a complex surface depend only on the oriented real
cohomology In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewe ...
ring of the surface, and are invariant under birational transformations except for h^ which increases by 1 under blowing up a single point. :*If the surface is Kähler then h^ = h^ and there are only three independent Hodge numbers. :*If the surface is compact then h^ equals h^ or h^-1.


Invariants related to Hodge numbers

There are many invariants that (at least for complex surfaces) can be written as linear combinations of the Hodge numbers, as follows: *
Betti number In algebraic topology, the Betti numbers are used to distinguish topological spaces based on the connectivity of ''n''-dimensional simplicial complexes. For the most reasonable finite-dimensional spaces (such as compact manifolds, finite simplici ...
s: defined by b_i = \dim H^i(S), 0 \leqslant i \leqslant 4. ::\begin b_0 = b_4 = 1 \\ b_1 = b_3 = h^ +h^ = h^ + h^ \\ b_2 = h^ + h^ + h^ \end :In characteristic ''p'' > 0 the Betti numbers are defined using
l-adic cohomology In mathematics, the -adic number system for any prime number  extends the ordinary arithmetic of the rational numbers in a different way from the extension of the rational number system to the real and complex number systems. The extension ...
and need not satisfy these relations. * Euler characteristic or Euler number: ::e=b_0-b_1+b_2-b_3+b_4. *The irregularity is defined as the dimension of the
Picard variety In mathematics, the Picard group of a ringed space ''X'', denoted by Pic(''X''), is the group of isomorphism classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles) on ''X'', with the group operation being tensor product. This construction is a global v ...
and the
Albanese variety In mathematics, the Albanese variety A(V), named for Giacomo Albanese, is a generalization of the Jacobian variety of a curve. Precise statement The Albanese variety is the abelian variety A generated by a variety V taking a given point of V to ...
and denoted by ''q''. For complex surfaces (but not always for surfaces of prime characteristic) ::q= h^. *The
geometric genus In algebraic geometry, the geometric genus is a basic birational invariant of algebraic varieties and complex manifolds. Definition The geometric genus can be defined for non-singular complex projective varieties and more generally for complex ...
: ::p_g = h^ = h^ = P_1. *The arithmetic genus: ::p_a = p_g - q = h^ - h^. *The
holomorphic Euler characteristic In mathematics, especially in algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, coherent sheaf cohomology is a technique for producing functions with specified properties. Many geometric questions can be formulated as questions about the ex ...
of the trivial bundle (usually differs from the Euler number ''e'' defined above): ::\chi = p_g - q +1 = h^ -h^ +1. :By Noether's formula it is also equal to the
Todd genus In mathematics, the Todd class is a certain construction now considered a part of the theory in algebraic topology of characteristic classes. The Todd class of a vector bundle can be defined by means of the theory of Chern classes, and is encounter ...
\tfrac(c_1^2 +c_2). *The signature of the second cohomology group for complex surfaces is denoted by \tau: ::\tau = 4\chi - e = \sum\nolimits_(-1)^j h^. * b^are the dimensions of the maximal positive and negative definite subspaces of H^2, so: ::\begin b^+ + b^- = b_2 \\ b^+-b^- = \tau \end *''c''2 = ''e'' and c_1^2 = K^2 = 12\chi - e are the
Chern number In mathematics, in particular in algebraic topology, differential geometry and algebraic geometry, the Chern classes are characteristic classes associated with complex vector bundles. They have since found applications in physics, Calabi–Yau ma ...
s, defined as the integrals of various polynomials in the
Chern class In mathematics, in particular in algebraic topology, differential geometry and algebraic geometry, the Chern classes are characteristic classes associated with complex vector bundles. They have since found applications in physics, Calabi–Yau ...
es over the manifold.


Other invariants

There are further invariants of compact complex surfaces that are not used so much in the classification. These include algebraic invariants such as the
Picard group In mathematics, the Picard group of a ringed space ''X'', denoted by Pic(''X''), is the group of isomorphism classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles) on ''X'', with the group operation being tensor product. This construction is a global ve ...
Pic(''X'') of divisors modulo linear equivalence, its quotient the
Néron–Severi group In algebraic geometry, the Néron–Severi group of a variety is the group of divisors modulo algebraic equivalence; in other words it is the group of components of the Picard scheme of a variety. Its rank is called the Picard number. It is nam ...
NS(''X'') with rank the Picard number ρ, topological invariants such as the fundamental group π1 and the integral homology and cohomology groups, and invariants of the underlying smooth
4-manifold In mathematics, a 4-manifold is a 4-dimensional topological manifold. A smooth 4-manifold is a 4-manifold with a smooth structure In mathematics, a smooth structure on a manifold allows for an unambiguous notion of smooth function. In particular, a ...
such as the Seiberg–Witten invariants and
Donaldson invariant In mathematics, and especially gauge theory, Donaldson theory is the study of the topology of smooth 4-manifolds using moduli spaces of anti-self-dual instantons. It was started by Simon Donaldson (1983) who proved Donaldson's theorem restricting ...
s.


Minimal models and blowing up

Any surface is birational to a non-singular surface, so for most purposes it is enough to classify the non-singular surfaces. Given any point on a surface, we can form a new surface by
blowing up In mathematics, blowing up or blowup is a type of geometric transformation which replaces a subspace of a given space with all the directions pointing out of that subspace. For example, the blowup of a point in a plane replaces the point with the ...
this point, which means roughly that we replace it by a copy of the projective line. For the purpose of this article, a non-singular surface ''X'' is called minimal if it cannot be obtained from another non-singular surface by blowing up a point. By
Castelnuovo's contraction theorem In mathematics, Castelnuovo's contraction theorem is used in the classification theory of algebraic surfaces to construct the minimal model of a given smooth algebraic surface. More precisely, let X be a smooth projective surface over \mathb ...
, this is equivalent to saying that ''X'' has no (−1)-curves (smooth rational curves with self-intersection number −1). (In the more modern terminology of the
minimal model program In algebraic geometry, the minimal model program is part of the birational classification of algebraic varieties. Its goal is to construct a birational model of any complex projective variety which is as simple as possible. The subject has its or ...
, a smooth projective surface ''X'' would be called minimal if its canonical line bundle ''KX'' is nef. A smooth projective surface has a minimal model in that stronger sense if and only if its Kodaira dimension is nonnegative.) Every surface ''X'' is birational to a minimal non-singular surface, and this minimal non-singular surface is unique if ''X'' has Kodaira dimension at least 0 or is not algebraic. Algebraic surfaces of Kodaira dimension -\infty may be birational to more than one minimal non-singular surface, but it is easy to describe the relation between these minimal surfaces. For example, P1 × P1 blown up at a point is isomorphic to P2 blown up twice. So to classify all compact complex surfaces up to birational isomorphism it is (more or less) enough to classify the minimal non-singular ones.


Surfaces of Kodaira dimension −∞

Algebraic surfaces of Kodaira dimension -\infty can be classified as follows. If ''q'' > 0 then the map to the Albanese variety has fibers that are projective lines (if the surface is minimal) so the surface is a ruled surface. If ''q'' = 0 this argument does not work as the Albanese variety is a point, but in this case Castelnuovo's theorem implies that the surface is rational. For non-algebraic surfaces Kodaira found an extra class of surfaces, called type VII, which are still not well understood.


Rational surfaces

Rational surface In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, a rational surface is a surface birationally equivalent to the projective plane, or in other words a rational variety of dimension two. Rational surfaces are the simplest of the 10 or so classes of su ...
means surface birational to the
complex projective plane In mathematics, the complex projective plane, usually denoted P2(C), is the two-dimensional complex projective space. It is a complex manifold of complex dimension 2, described by three complex coordinates :(Z_1,Z_2,Z_3) \in \mathbf^3,\qquad (Z_1, ...
P2. These are all algebraic. The minimal rational surfaces are P2 itself and the
Hirzebruch surface In mathematics, a Hirzebruch surface is a ruled surface over the projective line. They were studied by . Definition The Hirzebruch surface \Sigma_n is the \mathbb^1-bundle, called a Projective bundle, over \mathbb^1 associated to the sheaf\mathca ...
s Σ''n'' for ''n'' = 0 or ''n'' ≥ 2. (The Hirzebruch surface Σ''n'' is the P1 bundle over P1 associated to the sheaf O(0) + O(''n''). The surface Σ0 is isomorphic to P1 × P1, and Σ1 is isomorphic to P2 blown up at a point so is not minimal.) Invariants: The plurigenera are all 0 and the fundamental group is trivial. Hodge diamond: : : Examples: P2, P1 × P1 = Σ0, Hirzebruch surfaces Σn,
quadric In mathematics, a quadric or quadric surface (quadric hypersurface in higher dimensions), is a generalization of conic sections (ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas). It is a hypersurface (of dimension ''D'') in a -dimensional space, and it is de ...
s,
cubic surface In mathematics, a cubic surface is a surface in 3-dimensional space defined by one polynomial equation of degree 3. Cubic surfaces are fundamental examples in algebraic geometry. The theory is simplified by working in projective space rather th ...
s,
del Pezzo surface In mathematics, a del Pezzo surface or Fano surface is a two-dimensional Fano variety, in other words a non-singular projective algebraic surface with ample anticanonical divisor class. They are in some sense the opposite of surfaces of general ...
s,
Veronese surface In mathematics, the Veronese surface is an algebraic surface in five-dimensional projective space, and is realized by the Veronese embedding, the embedding of the projective plane given by the complete linear system of conics. It is named after Giu ...
. Many of these examples are non-minimal.


Ruled surfaces of genus > 0

Ruled surfaces of genus ''g'' have a smooth morphism to a curve of genus ''g'' whose fibers are lines P1. They are all algebraic. (The ones of genus 0 are the Hirzebruch surfaces and are rational.) Any ruled surface is birationally equivalent to P1 × ''C'' for a unique curve ''C'', so the classification of ruled surfaces up to birational equivalence is essentially the same as the classification of curves. A ruled surface not isomorphic to P1 × P1 has a unique ruling (P1 × P1 has two). Invariants: The plurigenera are all 0. Hodge diamond: : Examples: The product of any curve of genus > 0 with ''P''1.


Surfaces of class VII

These surfaces are never algebraic or Kähler. The minimal ones with ''b''2 = 0 have been classified by Bogomolov, and are either
Hopf surface In complex geometry, a Hopf surface is a compact complex surface obtained as a quotient of the complex vector space (with zero deleted) \Complex^2\setminus \ by a free action of a discrete group. If this group is the integers the Hopf surface is c ...
s or Inoue surfaces. Examples with positive second Betti number include Inoue-Hirzebruch surfaces, Enoki surfaces, and more generally
Kato surface In mathematics, a Kato surface is a compact complex surface with positive first Betti number that has a global spherical shell. showed that Kato surfaces have small analytic deformations that are the blowups of primary Hopf surfaces at a finite num ...
s. The global spherical shell conjecture implies that all minimal class VII surfaces with positive second Betti number are Kato surfaces, which would more or less complete the classification of the type VII surfaces. Invariants: ''q'' = 1, ''h''1,0 = 0. All plurigenera are 0. Hodge diamond: :


Surfaces of Kodaira dimension 0

These surfaces are classified by starting with Noether's formula 12\chi = c_2 + c_1^2. For Kodaira dimension 0, ''K'' has zero intersection number with itself, so c_1^2 = 0. Using :\begin \chi &= h^ - h^ +h^ \\ c_2 &= 2 - 2b_1 +b_2 \end we arrive at: :10+12h^ = 8 h^ + 2 \left (2h^ - b_1 \right )+ b_2 Moreover since ''κ'' = 0 we have: :h^ = \begin 1 & K = 0 \\ 0 & \text \end combining this with the previous equation gives: :8 h^ + 2 \left (2h^ - b_1 \right )+ b_2 = \begin 22 & K = 0 \\ 10 & \text \end In general 2''h''0,1 ≥ ''b''1, so three terms on the left are non-negative integers and there are only a few solutions to this equation. * For algebraic surfaces 2''h''0,1 − ''b''1 is an even integer between 0 and 2''pg''. * For compact complex surfaces 2''h''0,1 − ''b''1 = 0 or 1. * For Kähler surfaces 2''h''0,1 − ''b''1 = 0 and ''h''1,0 = ''h''0,1. Most solutions to these conditions correspond to classes of surfaces, as in the following table:


K3 surfaces

These are the minimal compact complex surfaces of Kodaira dimension 0 with ''q'' = 0 and trivial canonical line bundle. They are all
Kähler manifold In mathematics and especially differential geometry, a Kähler manifold is a manifold with three mutually compatible structures: a complex structure, a Riemannian structure, and a symplectic structure. The concept was first studied by Jan Arnold ...
s. All K3 surfaces are diffeomorphic, and their diffeomorphism class is an important example of a smooth spin simply connected 4-manifold. Invariants: The second cohomology group ''H''2(''X'', Z) is isomorphic to the unique even
unimodular lattice In geometry and mathematical group theory, a unimodular lattice is an integral lattice of determinant 1 or −1. For a lattice in ''n''-dimensional Euclidean space, this is equivalent to requiring that the volume of any fundamen ...
II3,19 of dimension 22 and signature −16. Hodge diamond: Examples: *Degree 4 hypersurfaces in P3(C) *
Kummer surface In algebraic geometry, a Kummer quartic surface, first studied by , is an irreducible nodal surface of degree 4 in \mathbb^3 with the maximal possible number of 16 double points. Any such surface is the Kummer variety of the Jacobian varie ...
s. These are obtained by ''quotienting out'' an abelian surface by the automorphism ''a'' → −''a'', then blowing up the 16 singular points. A marked K3 surface is a K3 surface together with an isomorphism from II3,19 to ''H''2(''X'', Z). The moduli space of marked K3 surfaces is connected non-Hausdorff smooth analytic space of dimension 20. The algebraic K3 surfaces form a countable collection of 19-dimensional subvarieties of it.


Abelian surfaces and 2-dimensional complex tori

The two-dimensional
complex tori In mathematics, a complex torus is a particular kind of complex manifold ''M'' whose underlying smooth manifold is a torus in the usual sense (i.e. the cartesian product of some number ''N'' circles). Here ''N'' must be the even number 2''n'', whe ...
include the
abelian surface In mathematics, an abelian surface is a 2-dimensional abelian variety. One-dimensional complex tori are just elliptic curves and are all algebraic, but Riemann discovered that most complex tori of dimension 2 are not algebraic via the Riemann bi ...
s. One-dimensional complex tori are just elliptic curves and are all algebraic, but Riemann discovered that most complex tori of dimension 2 are not algebraic. The algebraic ones are exactly the 2-dimensional
abelian varieties In mathematics, particularly in algebraic geometry, complex analysis and algebraic number theory, an abelian variety is a Algebraic variety#Projective variety, projective algebraic variety that is also an algebraic group, i.e., has a group law th ...
. Most of their theory is a special case of the theory of higher-dimensional tori or abelian varieties. Criteria to be a product of two elliptic curves (up to
isogeny In mathematics, in particular, in algebraic geometry, an isogeny is a morphism of algebraic groups (also known as group varieties) that is surjective and has a finite kernel. If the groups are abelian varieties, then any morphism of the underlyi ...
) were a popular study in the nineteenth century. Invariants: The plurigenera are all 1. The surface is diffeomorphic to ''S''1 × ''S''1 × ''S''1 × ''S''1 so the fundamental group is Z4. Hodge diamond: : Examples: A product of two elliptic curves. The Jacobian of a genus 2 curve. Any quotient of C2 by a lattice.


Kodaira surfaces

These are never algebraic, though they have non-constant meromorphic functions. They are usually divided into two subtypes: primary Kodaira surfaces with trivial canonical bundle, and secondary Kodaira surfaces which are quotients of these by finite groups of orders 2, 3, 4, or 6, and which have non-trivial canonical bundles. The secondary Kodaira surfaces have the same relation to primary ones that Enriques surfaces have to K3 surfaces, or bielliptic surfaces have to abelian surfaces. Invariants: If the surface is the quotient of a primary Kodaira surface by a group of order ''k'' = 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, then the plurigenera ''Pn'' are 1 if ''n'' is divisible by ''k'' and 0 otherwise. Hodge diamond: : : Examples: Take a non-trivial line bundle over an elliptic curve, remove the zero section, then quotient out the fibers by Z acting as multiplication by powers of some complex number ''z''. This gives a primary Kodaira surface.


Enriques surfaces

These are the complex surfaces such that ''q'' = 0 and the canonical line bundle is non-trivial, but has trivial square. Enriques surfaces are all algebraic (and therefore Kähler). They are quotients of K3 surfaces by a group of order 2 and their theory is similar to that of algebraic K3 surfaces. Invariants: The plurigenera ''Pn'' are 1 if ''n'' is even and 0 if ''n'' is odd. The fundamental group has order 2. The second cohomology group H2(''X'', Z) is isomorphic to the sum of the unique even
unimodular lattice In geometry and mathematical group theory, a unimodular lattice is an integral lattice of determinant 1 or −1. For a lattice in ''n''-dimensional Euclidean space, this is equivalent to requiring that the volume of any fundamen ...
II1,9 of dimension 10 and signature −8 and a group of order 2. Hodge diamond: : Marked Enriques surfaces form a connected 10-dimensional family, which has been described explicitly. In characteristic 2 there are some extra families of Enriques surfaces called singular and supersingular Enriques surfaces; see the article on
Enriques surface In mathematics, Enriques surfaces are algebraic surfaces such that the irregularity ''q'' = 0 and the canonical line bundle ''K'' is non-trivial but has trivial square. Enriques surfaces are all projective (and therefore Kähler over the complex ...
s for details.


Hyperelliptic (or bielliptic) surfaces

Over the complex numbers these are quotients of a product of two elliptic curves by a finite group of automorphisms. The finite group can be Z/2Z,  Z/2Z + Z/2Z, Z/3Z,  Z/3Z + Z/3Z,  Z/4Z,  Z/4Z + Z/2Z, or Z/6Z, giving seven families of such surfaces. Over fields of characteristics 2 or 3 there are some extra families given by taking quotients by a non-etale group scheme; see the article on
hyperelliptic surface In mathematics, a hyperelliptic surface, or bi-elliptic surface, is a surface whose Albanese morphism is an elliptic fibration. Any such surface can be written as the quotient of a product of two elliptic curves by a finite abelian group. Hyperel ...
s for details. Hodge diamond: :


Surfaces of Kodaira dimension 1

An
elliptic surface In mathematics, an elliptic surface is a surface that has an elliptic fibration, in other words a proper morphism with connected fibers to an algebraic curve such that almost all fibers are smooth curves of genus 1. (Over an algebraically closed fi ...
is a surface equipped with an elliptic fibration (a surjective holomorphic map to a curve ''B'' such that all but finitely many fibers are smooth irreducible curves of genus 1). The generic fiber in such a fibration is a genus 1 curve over the function field of ''B''. Conversely, given a genus 1 curve over the function field of a curve, its relative minimal model is an elliptic surface. Kodaira and others have given a fairly complete description of all elliptic surfaces. In particular, Kodaira gave a complete list of the possible singular fibers. The theory of elliptic surfaces is analogous to the theory of proper regular models of elliptic curves over
discrete valuation ring In abstract algebra, a discrete valuation ring (DVR) is a principal ideal domain (PID) with exactly one non-zero maximal ideal. This means a DVR is an integral domain ''R'' which satisfies any one of the following equivalent conditions: # ''R'' ...
s (e.g., the ring of ''p''-adic integers) and
Dedekind domain In abstract algebra, a Dedekind domain or Dedekind ring, named after Richard Dedekind, is an integral domain in which every nonzero proper ideal factors into a product of prime ideals. It can be shown that such a factorization is then necessarily ...
s (e.g., the ring of integers of a number field). In finite characteristic 2 and 3 one can also get quasi-elliptic surfaces, whose fibers may almost all be rational curves with a single node, which are "degenerate elliptic curves". Every surface of
Kodaira dimension In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
1 is an elliptic surface (or a quasielliptic surface in characteristics 2 or 3), but the converse is not true: an elliptic surface can have Kodaira dimension -\infty, 0, or 1. All
Enriques surface In mathematics, Enriques surfaces are algebraic surfaces such that the irregularity ''q'' = 0 and the canonical line bundle ''K'' is non-trivial but has trivial square. Enriques surfaces are all projective (and therefore Kähler over the complex ...
s, all
hyperelliptic surface In mathematics, a hyperelliptic surface, or bi-elliptic surface, is a surface whose Albanese morphism is an elliptic fibration. Any such surface can be written as the quotient of a product of two elliptic curves by a finite abelian group. Hyperel ...
s, all
Kodaira surface In mathematics, a Kodaira surface is a compact complex surface of Kodaira dimension 0 and odd first Betti number. The concept is named after Kunihiko Kodaira. These are never algebraic, though they have non-constant meromorphic functions. They are ...
s, some
K3 surface In mathematics, a complex analytic K3 surface is a compact connected complex manifold of dimension 2 with trivial canonical bundle and irregularity zero. An (algebraic) K3 surface over any field means a smooth proper geometrically connected alg ...
s, some
abelian surface In mathematics, an abelian surface is a 2-dimensional abelian variety. One-dimensional complex tori are just elliptic curves and are all algebraic, but Riemann discovered that most complex tori of dimension 2 are not algebraic via the Riemann bi ...
s, and some
rational surface In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, a rational surface is a surface birationally equivalent to the projective plane, or in other words a rational variety of dimension two. Rational surfaces are the simplest of the 10 or so classes of su ...
s are elliptic surfaces, and these examples have Kodaira dimension less than 1. An elliptic surface whose base curve ''B'' is of genus at least 2 always has Kodaira dimension 1, but the Kodaira dimension can be 1 also for some elliptic surfaces with ''B'' of genus 0 or 1. Invariants: c_1^2 =0, c_2\geqslant 0. Example: If ''E'' is an elliptic curve and ''B'' is a curve of genus at least 2, then ''E''×''B'' is an elliptic surface of Kodaira dimension 1.


Surfaces of Kodaira dimension 2 (surfaces of general type)

These are all algebraic, and in some sense most surfaces are in this class. Gieseker showed that there is a coarse moduli scheme for surfaces of general type; this means that for any fixed values of the Chern numbers ''c'' and ''c''2, there is a quasi-projective scheme classifying the surfaces of general type with those Chern numbers. However it is a very difficult problem to describe these schemes explicitly, and there are very few pairs of Chern numbers for which this has been done (except when the scheme is empty!) Invariants: There are several conditions that the Chern numbers of a minimal complex surface of general type must satisfy: *c_1^2, c_2>0 *c_1^2 \leqslant 3c_2 (the
Bogomolov–Miyaoka–Yau inequality In mathematics, the Bogomolov–Miyaoka–Yau inequality is the inequality : c_1^2 \le 3 c_2 between Chern numbers of compact complex surfaces of general type. Its major interest is the way it restricts the possible topological types of the under ...
) *5c_1^2 - c_2 + 36 \geqslant 0 (the Noether inequality) *c_1^2 + c_1 \equiv 0 \bmod 12. Most pairs of integers satisfying these conditions are the Chern numbers for some complex surface of general type. Examples: The simplest examples are the product of two curves of genus at least 2, and a hypersurface of degree at least 5 in ''P''3. There are a large number of other constructions known. However, there is no known construction that can produce "typical" surfaces of general type for large Chern numbers; in fact it is not even known if there is any reasonable concept of a "typical" surface of general type. There are many other examples that have been found, including most
Hilbert modular surface In mathematics, a Hilbert modular surface or Hilbert–Blumenthal surface is an algebraic surface obtained by taking a quotient of a product of two copies of the upper half-plane by a Hilbert modular group. More generally, a Hilbert modular varie ...
s,
fake projective plane In mathematics, a fake projective plane (or Mumford surface) is one of the 50 complex algebraic surfaces that have the same Betti numbers as the projective plane, but are not isomorphic to it. Such objects are always algebraic surfaces of general ...
s,
Barlow surface In mathematics, a Barlow surface is one of the complex surfaces introduced by . They are simply connected surfaces of general type with ''pg'' = 0. They are homeomorphic but not diffeomorphic to a projective plane blown up in 8 points. T ...
s, and so on.


See also

*
List of algebraic surfaces This is a list of named algebraic surfaces, compact complex surfaces, and families thereof, sorted according to their Kodaira dimension following Enriques–Kodaira classification. Kodaira dimension −∞ Rational surfaces * Projective plane Qu ...


References

* – the standard reference book for compact complex surfaces *; ( softcover) – including a more elementary introduction to the classification * * * * * * * * * * * *


External links


le superficie algebriche
is an interactive visualisation of the Enriques--Kodaira classification, by Pieter Belmans and Johan Commelin {{DEFAULTSORT:Enriques-Kodaira classification Complex surfaces Birational geometry Algebraic surfaces Mathematical classification systems