Intersection cohomology. (Notes of a Seminar on Intersection Homology at the University of Bern, Switzerland, Spring 1983) (Q801981): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 01:16, 5 March 2024
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English | Intersection cohomology. (Notes of a Seminar on Intersection Homology at the University of Bern, Switzerland, Spring 1983) |
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Intersection cohomology. (Notes of a Seminar on Intersection Homology at the University of Bern, Switzerland, Spring 1983) (English)
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1984
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This volume consists of notes of a seminar going through basic properties of intersection cohomology. However 60\% of its length is devoted to a major account by Borel of sheaf theory as it applies to intersection cohomology. The sections are as follows: 1) Introduction to piecewise linear intersection homology (p. 1-22), by \textit{A. Haefliger}. - 2) From PL to sheaf theory (p. 23-34), by \textit{N. Habegger}. - 3) A sample computation of intersection homology (p. 35-40), by \textit{M. Goresky} and \textit{R. MacPherson}. - 4) Pseudomanifold structures on complex analytic spaces (p. 41-46) (brief statement of a result of B. Teissier) (p. 209- 220), by \textit{N. A'Campo}. - 5) Sheaf theoretic intersection cohomology (p. 47-182), by \textit{A. Borel} (with the collaboration of \textit{N. Spaltenstein}). - 6) Les foncteurs de la categorie des faisecaux associés à une application continue (p. 183-208), by \textit{P. P. Grivel}. - 7) Witt space cobordism theory (after P. Siegel), by \textit{M. Goresky}. - 8) Lefschetz fixed point theorems and intersection homology, by \textit{M. Goresky} and \textit{R. MacPherson}. - 9) Problems and bibliography on intersection homology (p. 221-228), by \textit{M. Goresky} and \textit{R. MacPherson}. - All of these - except the last - are brief accounts of topics treated more fully elsewhere; they are written to be independent of each other, apart from basic notions. The long chapter 5 by A. Borel is a major contribution to the literature on sheaf theory. The traditional books in the subject (Godement, Swan, Bredon), written twenty years ago, do not include a number of topics which have been developed later. - Notable are the functors \(f_ !\), and \(f^ !\), which are explained here in chapter 6, by P. P. Grivel - a most useful account. Borel's chapter includes a rather detailed account of the properties of these, and other functors both of sheaves and in the derived category: these are introduced as necessary in the study of intersection cohomology. The development here is modelled on the paper of \textit{M. Goresky} and \textit{R. MacPherson}, ''Intersection Homology. II'', Invent. Math. 72, 77-129 (1983; Zbl 0529.55007): Deligne's iterative construction of perverse sheaves is axiomatised; the axioms are modified, and used to prove topological invariance; there is an extended discussion of duality, including a general account of Verdier duality. Nowhere in this book the special properties of intersection cohomology of complex analytic spaces with middle perversity are treated. As these seem to be crucial to all the major applications (and to 75\% of the papers in the bibliography) this is a highly significant - if understandable - omission: there seems at present to be no expository account in existence.
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Intersection cohomology
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Intersection homology
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perverse sheaves
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Verdier duality
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