In
mathematics, the Kodaira–Spencer map, introduced by
Kunihiko Kodaira
was a Japanese mathematician known for distinguished work in algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, and as the founder of the Japanese school of algebraic geometers. He was awarded a Fields Medal in 1954, being the first Japane ...
and
Donald C. Spencer, is a
map associated to a
deformation of a
scheme or
complex manifold
In differential geometry and complex geometry, a complex manifold is a manifold with an atlas of charts to the open unit disc in \mathbb^n, such that the transition maps are holomorphic.
The term complex manifold is variously used to mean a ...
''X'', taking a
tangent space of a point of the
deformation space to the first
cohomology group of the
sheaf of
vector fields on ''X''.
Definition
Historical motivation
The Kodaira–Spencer map was originally constructed in the setting of complex manifolds. Given a complex analytic manifold
with charts
and biholomorphic maps
sending
gluing the charts together, the idea of deformation theory is to replace these transition maps
by parametrized transition maps
over some base
(which could be a real manifold) with coordinates
, such that
. This means the parameters
deform the complex structure of the original complex manifold
. Then, these functions must also satisfy a cocycle condition, which gives a 1-cocycle on
with values in its tangent bundle. Since the base can be assumed to be a polydisk, this process gives a map between the tangent space of the base to
called the Kodaira–Spencer map.
Original definition
More formally, the Kodaira–Spencer map is
:
where
*
is a smooth proper map between
complex spaces (i.e., a deformation of the
special fiber .)
*
is the connecting homomorphism obtained by taking a long exact cohomology sequence of the surjection
whose kernel is the tangent bundle
.
If
is in
, then its image
is called the Kodaira–Spencer class of
.
Remarks
Because deformation theory has been extended to multiple other contexts, such as deformations in scheme theory, or ringed topoi, there are constructions of the Kodaira–Spencer map for these contexts.
In the scheme theory over a base field
of characteristic
, there is a natural bijection between isomorphisms classes of
and
.
Constructions
Using infinitesimals
Cocycle condition for deformations
Over characteristic
the construction of the Kodaira–Spencer map can be done using an infinitesimal interpretation of the cocycle condition. If we have a complex manifold
covered by finitely many charts
with coordinates
and transition functions
where
Recall that a deformation is given by a commutative diagram
where