Birational Calabi-Yau manifolds have the same small quantum products (Q2296297): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 03:43, 19 April 2024
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English | Birational Calabi-Yau manifolds have the same small quantum products |
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Birational Calabi-Yau manifolds have the same small quantum products (English)
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18 February 2020
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\textit{V. V. Batyrev} [Lond. Math. Soc. Lect. Note Ser. 264, 1--11 (1999; Zbl 0955.14028)] showed that birationally equivalent Calabi-Yau (CY) manifolds have equal Betti numbers, and it follows from work of several authors that their integral cohomology groups are isomorphic. While the cup product structures may differ, \textit{A.-M. Li} and \textit{Y. Ruan} [Invent. Math. 145, No. 1, 151--218 (2001; Zbl 1062.53073)] proved that small quantum cohomology (QC) rings are isomorphic for CY \(3\)-folds. Even big QC rings were proven isomorphic, but only under ordinary flops. In this paper the author proves the isomorphism of small QC rings under a change of Novikov ring. Unlike previous proofs, that rely on a degeneration argument and the quantum Leray-Hirsch theorem, this one uses Hamiltonian Floer cohomology, which is known to be isomorphic to small QC. The proof works in greater generality and ``explains'' why the result is true, but, as a tradeoff, the isomorphism is not explicit. As a corollary, the author gives a new proof of Batyrev's result. The idea of proof is inspired by Borman and Sheridan. The Hamiltonians on the two manifolds are chosen constant outside of a ``large'' compact set \(K\) that sits inside their isomorphic Zariski dense affine open subsets, and the Kähler forms are modified to agree near \(K\). Ignoring \(1\)-periodic orbits outside of \(K\) makes the Floer groups ``identical'', but, alas, they are no longer isomorphic to the small QC groups. The fix is to use sequences of Hamiltonians that tend to infinity outside of \(K\) to define ``symplectic cohomology'' that restores the isomorphism.
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birational equivalence
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Calabi-Yau
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small quantum cohomology
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Hamiltonian Floer cohomology
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