In algebraic geometry, Brill–Noether theory, introduced by Template:Harvs, is the study of special divisors, certain divisors on a curve Template:Mvar that determine more compatible functions than would be predicted. In classical language, special divisors move on the curve in a "larger than expected" linear system of divisors.
Throughout, we consider a projective smooth curve over the complex numbers (or over some other algebraically closed field).
The condition to be a special divisor Template:Mvar can be formulated in sheaf cohomology terms, as the non-vanishing of the Template:Math cohomology of the sheaf of sections of the invertible sheaf or line bundle associated to Template:Mvar. This means that, by the Riemann–Roch theorem, the Template:Math cohomology or space of holomorphic sections is larger than expected.
Alternatively, by Serre duality, the condition is that there exist holomorphic differentials with divisor Template:Math on the curve.
Main theorems of Brill–Noether theoryEdit
For a given genus Template:Mvar, the moduli space for curves Template:Mvar of genus Template:Mvar should contain a dense subset parameterizing those curves with the minimum in the way of special divisors. One goal of the theory is to 'count constants', for those curves: to predict the dimension of the space of special divisors (up to linear equivalence) of a given degree Template:Mvar, as a function of Template:Mvar, that must be present on a curve of that genus.
The basic statement can be formulated in terms of the Picard variety Template:Math of a smooth curve Template:Mvar, and the subset of Template:Math corresponding to divisor classes of divisors Template:Mvar, with given values Template:Mvar of Template:Math and Template:Mvar of Template:Math in the notation of the Riemann–Roch theorem. There is a lower bound Template:Mvar for the dimension Template:Math of this subscheme in Template:Math:
- <math>\dim(d,r,g) \geq \rho = g-(r+1)(g-d+r)</math>
called the Brill–Noether number. The formula can be memorized via the mnemonic (using our desired <math>h^0(D) = r+1 </math> and Riemann-Roch)
- <math>g-(r+1)(g-d+r) = g - h^0(D)h^1(D)</math>
For smooth curves Template:Mvar and for Template:Math, Template:Math the basic results about the space Template:Tmath of linear systems on Template:Mvar of degree Template:Mvar and dimension Template:Mvar are as follows.
- George Kempf proved that if Template:Math then Template:Tmath is not empty, and every component has dimension at least Template:Mvar.
- William Fulton and Robert Lazarsfeld proved that if Template:Math then Template:Tmath is connected.
- Template:Harvtxt showed that if Template:Mvar is generic then Template:Tmath is reduced and all components have dimension exactly Template:Mvar (so in particular Template:Tmath is empty if Template:Math).
- David Gieseker proved that if Template:Mvar is generic then Template:Tmath is smooth. By the connectedness result this implies it is irreducible if Template:Math.
Other more recent results not necessarily in terms of space Template:Tmath of linear systems are:
- Eric Larson (2017) proved that if Template:Math, Template:Math, and Template:Math, the restriction maps <math>H^0(\mathcal{O}_{\mathbb{P}^r}(n))\rightarrow H^0(\mathcal{O}_{C}(n))</math> are of maximal rank, also known as the maximal rank conjecture.<ref>Template:Cite arXiv</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Eric Larson and Isabel Vogt (2022) proved that if Template:Math then there is a curve Template:Mvar interpolating through Template:Mvar general points in Template:Tmath if and only if <math>(r-1)n \leq (r + 1)d - (r-3)(g-1),</math> except in 4 exceptional cases: Template:Math<ref>Template:Cite arXiv</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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ReferencesEdit
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