Fujiki class C: Difference between revisions
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In algebraic geometry, a complex manifold is called Fujiki class if it is bimeromorphic to a compact Kähler manifold. This notion was defined by Akira Fujiki.[1]
Properties
Let M be a compact manifold of Fujiki class , and its complex subvariety. Then X is also in Fujiki class (,[2] Lemma 4.6). Moreover, the Douady space of X (that is, the moduli of deformations of a subvariety , M fixed) is compact and in Fujiki class .[3]
Fujiki class manifolds are examples of compact complex manifolds which are not necessarily Kähler, but for which the -lemma holds.[4]
Conjectures
J.-P. Demailly and M. Pǎun have shown that a manifold is in Fujiki class if and only if it supports a Kähler current.[5] They also conjectured that a manifold M is in Fujiki class if it admits a nef current which is big, that is, satisfies
For a cohomology class which is rational, this statement is known: by Grauert-Riemenschneider conjecture, a holomorphic line bundle L with first Chern class
nef and big has maximal Kodaira dimension, hence the corresponding rational map to
is generically finite onto its image, which is algebraic, and therefore Kähler.
Fujiki[6] and Ueno[7] asked whether the property is stable under deformations. This conjecture was disproven in 1992 by Y.-S. Poon and Claude LeBrun [8]
References
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- ↑ Demailly, Jean-Pierre; Pǎun, Mihai Numerical characterization of the Kahler cone of a compact Kahler manifold, Ann. of Math. (2) 159 (2004), no. 3, 1247--1274. Template:MathSciNet
- ↑ Template:Cite journal
- ↑ K. Ueno, ed., "Open Problems," Classification of Algebraic and Analytic Manifolds, Birkhaser, 1983.
- ↑ Claude LeBrun, Yat-Sun Poon, "Twistors, Kahler manifolds, and bimeromorphic geometry II", J. Amer. Math. Soc. 5 (1992) Template:MathSciNet