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Transactions of the American Mathematical Society

Published by the American Mathematical Society since 1900, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society is devoted to longer research articles in all areas of pure and applied mathematics.

ISSN 1088-6850 (online) ISSN 0002-9947 (print)

The 2020 MCQ for Transactions of the American Mathematical Society is 1.48.

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The Albanese mapping for a punctual Hilbert scheme. II. Symmetrized differentials and singularities
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by Mark E. Huibregtse PDF
Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 274 (1982), 109-140 Request permission

Abstract:

Let $f:X \to A$ be the canonical mapping from the irreducible and nonsingular surface $X$ to its Albanese variety $A$, $X(n)$ the $n$-fold symmetric product of $X$, and $H_X^n$ the punctual Hilbert scheme parameterizing $0$-dimensional closed subschemes of length $n$ on $X$. The latter is an irreducible and nonsingular variety of dimension $2n$, and the "Hilbert-Chow" morphism ${\sigma _n}:H_X^n \to X(n)$ is a birational map which desingularizes $X(n)$. Let ${f_n}:X(n) \to A$ denote the map induced by $f$ by addition on $A$. This paper studies the singularities of the composite morphism \[ \varphi _n : H_X^n \stackrel {\sigma _n}{\to } X(n) \stackrel {f_n}{\to } A, \] which is a natural generalization of the mapping $C(n) \to J$, where $C$ is an irreducible and nonsingular curve and $J$ is its Jacobian. Unlike the latter, however, ${\varphi _n}$ need not be smooth for $n \gg 0$. We prove that ${\varphi _n}$ is smooth for $n \gg 0$ only if $f:X \to A$ is smooth (Theorem 3), and over ${\mathbf {C}}$ we prove the converse (Theorem 4). In case $X = A$ is an abelian surface, we show ${\varphi _n}$ is smooth for $n$ prime to the characteristic (Theorem 5), and give a counterexample to smoothness for all $n$ (Theorem 6). We exhibit a connection (over ${\mathbf {C}}$) between singularities of ${\varphi _n}$ and generalized Weierstrass points of $X$ (Theorem 9). Our method is as follows: We first show that the singularities of ${\varphi _n}$ are the zeros of certain holomorphic $1$-forms on $H_X^n$ which are the "symmetrizations" of holomorphic $1$-forms on $X$. We then study "symmetrized differentials" and their zeros on $H_X^n$ (Theorems 1,2). Our method works for curves $C$ as well; we give an alternative proof of a result of Mattuck and Mayer [10, p. 226] which shows that the zeros of symmetrized differentials on $C(n)$ represent (for $C$ complete nonsingular) the special divisors of degree $n$ on $C$.
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Additional Information
  • © Copyright 1982 American Mathematical Society
  • Journal: Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 274 (1982), 109-140
  • MSC: Primary 14C05; Secondary 14C25, 14F07, 14J99, 14K99
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1090/S0002-9947-1982-0670923-0
  • MathSciNet review: 670923