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Hodge Theory and Complex Algebraic Geometry II: Volume 2 [Minkštas viršelis]

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Translated by , (Université de Paris VI (Pierre et Marie Curie))
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 362 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 227x154x19 mm, weight: 570 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 4 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Serija: Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521718023
  • ISBN-13: 9780521718028
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 362 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 227x154x19 mm, weight: 570 g, Worked examples or Exercises; 4 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Serija: Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Dec-2007
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521718023
  • ISBN-13: 9780521718028
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The 2003 second volume of this account of Kaehlerian geometry and Hodge theory starts with the topology of families of algebraic varieties. Proofs of the Lefschetz theorem on hyperplane sections, the PicardLefschetz study of Lefschetz pencils, and Deligne theorems on the degeneration of the Leray spectral sequence and the global invariant cycles follow. The main results of the second part are the generalized NoetherLefschetz theorems, the generic triviality of the AbelJacobi maps, and most importantly Nori's connectivity theorem, which generalizes the above. The last part of the book is devoted to the relationships between Hodge theory and algebraic cycles. The book concludes with the example of cycles on abelian varieties, where some results of Bloch and Beauville, for example, are expounded. The text is complemented by exercises giving useful results in complex algebraic geometry. It will be welcomed by researchers in both algebraic and differential geometry.

Recenzijos

'All together, the author has maintained her masterly style also throughout this second, much more advanced volume, just as expected. The entire two-volume text is highly instructive, inspiring, reader-friendly and generally outstanding. Without any doubt, these two volumes must be seen as an indispensible standard text on transcendental algebraic geometry for advanced students, teachers, and also researchers in this contemporary field of mathematics. The author provides, simultaneously and in a unique manner, both a complete didactic exposition and an up-to-date presentation of the subject, which is still a rather exceptional feature in the textbook literature.' Zentralblatt MATH 'The book provides a very satisfying exposition of all the methods of studying algebraic cycles that have come out of Hodge theory.' Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 'I would recommend anyone interested in learning about a topic in complex differential or algebraic geometry to read Voisin's volumes. She has done a remarkably good job.' Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society ' this book is going to become a very common reference in this field useful for both a student trying to learn the subject as well as the researcher that can find a wealth of results in a clear and compact format. The exposition is very precise and the introduction that precedes each chapter helps the reader to focus on the main ideas in the text.' Mathematical Reviews 'Mathematical rewards [ await] those who invest their mathematical energies in this beautiful pair of volumes.' Bulletin of the AMS Prize Winner Cambridge University Press congratulates Claire Voisin, winner of the 2007 Ruth Lyttle Satter Prize in Mathematics!

Daugiau informacijos

The second of two volumes offering a modern account of Kaehlerian geometry and Hodge theory for researchers in algebraic and differential geometry.
Introduction
1(16)
I. The Topology of Algebraic Varieties
17(110)
The Lefschetz Theorem on Hyperplane Sections
19(22)
Morse theory
20(8)
Morse's lemma
20(3)
Local study of the level set
23(4)
Globalisation
27(1)
Application to affine varieties
28(8)
Index of the square of the distance function
28(3)
Lefschetz theorem on hyperplane sections
31(3)
Applications
34(2)
Vanishing theorems and Lefschetz' theorem
36(5)
Exercises
39(2)
Lefschetz Pencils
41(26)
Lefschetz pencils
42(5)
Existence
42(4)
The holomorphic Morse lemma
46(1)
Lefschetz degeneration
47(6)
Vanishing spheres
47(1)
An application of Morse theory
48(5)
Application to Lefschetz pencils
53(14)
Blowup of the base locus
53(1)
The Lefschetz theorem
54(3)
Vanishing cohomology and primitive cohomology
57(3)
Cones over vanishing cycles
60(2)
Exercises
62(5)
Monodromy
67(31)
The monodromy action
69(8)
Local systems and representations of π1
69(4)
Local systems associated to a fibration
73(1)
Monodromy and variation of Hodge structure
74(3)
The case of Lefschetz pencils
77(12)
The Picard-Lefschetz formula
77(8)
Zariski's theorem
85(2)
Irreducibility of the monodromy action
87(2)
Application: the Noether-Lefschetz theorem
89(9)
The Noether-Lefschetz locus
89(4)
The Noether-Lefschetz theorem
93(1)
Exercises
94(4)
The Leray Spectral Sequence
98(29)
Definition of the spectral sequence
100(13)
The hypercohomology spectral sequence
100(7)
Spectral sequence of a composed functor
107(2)
The Leray spectral sequence
109(4)
Deligne's theorem
113(5)
The cup-product and spectral sequences
113(2)
The relative Lefschetz decomposition
115(2)
Degeneration of the spectral sequence
117(1)
The invariant cycles theorem
118(9)
Application of the degeneracy of the Leray-spectral sequence
118(1)
Some background on mixed Hodge theory
119(4)
The global invariant cycles theorem
123(1)
Exercises
124(3)
II. Variations of Hodge Structure
127(116)
Transversality and Applications
129(27)
Complexes associated to IVHS
130(8)
The de Rham complex of a flat bundle
130(3)
Transversality
133(4)
Construction of the complexes Kl, r
137(1)
The holomorphic Leray spectral sequence
138(5)
The Leray filtration on Ωpx and the complexes Kp, q
138(3)
Infinitesimal invariants
141(2)
Local study of Hodge loci
143(13)
General properties
143(3)
Infinitesimal study
146(2)
The Noether-Lefschetz locus
148(3)
A density criterion
151(2)
Exercises
153(3)
Hodge Filtration of Hypersurfaces
156(32)
Filtration by the order of the pole
158(9)
Logarithmic complexes
158(2)
Hodge filtration and filtration by the order of the pole
160(3)
The case of hypersurfaces of Pn
163(4)
IVHS of hypersurfaces
167(10)
Computation of
167(4)
Macaulay's theorem
171(4)
The symmetriser lemma
175(2)
First applications
177(11)
Hodge loci for families of hypersurfaces
177(2)
The generic Torelli theorem
179(5)
Exercises
184(4)
Normal Functions and Infinitesimal Invariants
188(27)
The Jacobian fibration
189(4)
Holomorphic structure
189(2)
Normal functions
191(1)
Infinitesimal invariants
192(1)
The Abel-Jacobi map
193(12)
General properties
193(4)
Geometric interpretation of the infinitesimal invariant
197(8)
The case of hypersurfaces of high degree in Pn
205(10)
Application of the symmetriser lemma
205(2)
Generic triviality of the Abel-Jacobi map
207(5)
Exercises
212(3)
Nori's Work
215(28)
The connectivity theorem
217(11)
Statement of the theorem
217(1)
Algebraic translation
218(5)
The case of hypersurfaces of projective space
223(5)
Algebraic equivalence
228(7)
General properties
228(1)
The Hodge class of a normal function
229(4)
Griffiths' theorem
233(2)
Application of the connectivity theorem
235(8)
The Nori equivalence
235(2)
Nori's theorem
237(3)
Exercises
240(3)
III. Algebraic Cycles
243(100)
Chow Groups
245(33)
Construction
247(9)
Rational equivalence
247(1)
Functoriality: proper morphisms and flat morphisms
248(6)
Localisation
254(2)
Intersection and cycle classes
256(13)
Intersection
256(3)
Correspondences
259(2)
Cycle classes
261(2)
Compatibilities
263(6)
Examples
269(9)
Chow groups of curves
269(1)
Chow groups of projective bundles
269(2)
Chow groups of blowups
271(2)
Chow groups of hypersurfaces of small degree
273(2)
Exercises
275(3)
Mumford's Theorem and its Generalisations
278(29)
Varieties with representable CH0
280(11)
Representability
280(4)
Roitman's theorem
284(5)
Statement of Mumford's theorem
289(2)
The Bloch-Srinivas construction
291(10)
Decomposition of the diagonal
291(3)
Proof of Mumford's theorem
294(4)
Other applications
298(3)
Generalisation
301(6)
Generalised decomposition of the diagonal
301(2)
An application
303(1)
Exercises
304(3)
The Bloch Conjecture and its Generalisations
307(36)
Surfaces with Pg = 0
308(14)
Statement of the conjecture
308(2)
Classification
310(3)
Bloch's conjecture for surfaces which are not of general type
313(2)
Godeaux surfaces
315(7)
Filtrations on Chow groups
322(6)
The generalised Bloch conjecture
322(2)
Conjectural filtration on the Chow groups
324(3)
The Saito filtration
327(1)
The case of abelian varieties
328(15)
The Pontryagin product
328(1)
Results of Bloch
329(7)
Fourier transform
336(3)
Results of Beauville
339(1)
Exercises
340(3)
References 343(5)
Index 348
Claire Voisin is a Professor at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, France