Derived categories of Burniat surfaces and exceptional collections (Q382302): Difference between revisions
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A Burniat surface is a smooth surface of general type \(X\) over an algebraically closed field \(\mathbb{K}\) of characteristic \(\neq 2\) satisfying \(p_g=H^2(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=0=H^1(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=q\) and \(K_X^2=6\). These surfaces form a \(4\)-dimensional family. Most of these surfaces (over \(\mathbb{C}\) all of them) can be conveniently described as a Galois \(\mathbb{Z}^2_2\)-cover of \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\), the blow-up of the projective plane in three points. The main result of the paper describes the structure of \(D^b(X)\), the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on \(X\). To be more precise, recall that an object \(E\in D^b(X)\) is called exceptional if \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=\mathbb{K}\) for \(l=0\) and \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=0\) for \(l\neq 0\). For example, any line bundle on \(X\) is exceptional. An exceptional collection \((E_1,\ldots,E_k)\) is an ordered sequence of exceptional objects satisfying \(\text{Hom}(E_m,E_n[l])=0\) for \(m>n\) and for all \(l\). The authors prove that on any Burniat surface \(X\) which is a Galois cover there exists an exceptional collection of length \(6\) consisting of line bundles \(L_i\). This implies that the orthogonal complement \(\mathcal{T}\) of this collection, that is the category of objects \(F\) satisfying \(\text{Hom}(F,L_i[l])=0\) for all \(i\) and all \(l\), has trivial Hochschild homology and finite Grothendieck group. The paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 the authors study the Picard group of a Burniat surface via its close connection to \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\) mentioned above. Section 3 recalls some well-known results concerning exceptional collections on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). In Section 4 the authors construct exceptional sequences of maximal possible length \(6\) using the results from Section 2. More precisely, they show that these sequences split into so-called blocks, similar to what happens on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). Furthermore, denoting \(\bigoplus_i L_i\) by \(T\), the authors calculate the DG-algebra of endomorphisms of \(T\) and prove that it is formal. The latter statement implies, in particular, that the category generated by the exceptional collection does not change when the surface is varied. The paper concludes with some remarks in Section 5. | |||
Property / review text: A Burniat surface is a smooth surface of general type \(X\) over an algebraically closed field \(\mathbb{K}\) of characteristic \(\neq 2\) satisfying \(p_g=H^2(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=0=H^1(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=q\) and \(K_X^2=6\). These surfaces form a \(4\)-dimensional family. Most of these surfaces (over \(\mathbb{C}\) all of them) can be conveniently described as a Galois \(\mathbb{Z}^2_2\)-cover of \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\), the blow-up of the projective plane in three points. The main result of the paper describes the structure of \(D^b(X)\), the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on \(X\). To be more precise, recall that an object \(E\in D^b(X)\) is called exceptional if \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=\mathbb{K}\) for \(l=0\) and \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=0\) for \(l\neq 0\). For example, any line bundle on \(X\) is exceptional. An exceptional collection \((E_1,\ldots,E_k)\) is an ordered sequence of exceptional objects satisfying \(\text{Hom}(E_m,E_n[l])=0\) for \(m>n\) and for all \(l\). The authors prove that on any Burniat surface \(X\) which is a Galois cover there exists an exceptional collection of length \(6\) consisting of line bundles \(L_i\). This implies that the orthogonal complement \(\mathcal{T}\) of this collection, that is the category of objects \(F\) satisfying \(\text{Hom}(F,L_i[l])=0\) for all \(i\) and all \(l\), has trivial Hochschild homology and finite Grothendieck group. The paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 the authors study the Picard group of a Burniat surface via its close connection to \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\) mentioned above. Section 3 recalls some well-known results concerning exceptional collections on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). In Section 4 the authors construct exceptional sequences of maximal possible length \(6\) using the results from Section 2. More precisely, they show that these sequences split into so-called blocks, similar to what happens on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). Furthermore, denoting \(\bigoplus_i L_i\) by \(T\), the authors calculate the DG-algebra of endomorphisms of \(T\) and prove that it is formal. The latter statement implies, in particular, that the category generated by the exceptional collection does not change when the surface is varied. The paper concludes with some remarks in Section 5. / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Pawel Sosna / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 14F05 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 14J29 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number | |||
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6228500 / rank | |||
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Burniat surfaces | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Burniat surfaces / rank | |||
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exceptional objects and collections | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: exceptional objects and collections / rank | |||
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Hochschild homology | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Hochschild homology / rank | |||
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Galois covers | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Galois covers / rank | |||
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semiorthogonal decompositions | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: semiorthogonal decompositions / rank | |||
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DG algebras | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: DG algebras / rank | |||
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Revision as of 12:02, 29 June 2023
scientific article
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English | Derived categories of Burniat surfaces and exceptional collections |
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Statements
Derived categories of Burniat surfaces and exceptional collections (English)
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18 November 2013
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A Burniat surface is a smooth surface of general type \(X\) over an algebraically closed field \(\mathbb{K}\) of characteristic \(\neq 2\) satisfying \(p_g=H^2(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=0=H^1(X,\mathcal{O}_X)=q\) and \(K_X^2=6\). These surfaces form a \(4\)-dimensional family. Most of these surfaces (over \(\mathbb{C}\) all of them) can be conveniently described as a Galois \(\mathbb{Z}^2_2\)-cover of \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\), the blow-up of the projective plane in three points. The main result of the paper describes the structure of \(D^b(X)\), the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on \(X\). To be more precise, recall that an object \(E\in D^b(X)\) is called exceptional if \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=\mathbb{K}\) for \(l=0\) and \(\text{Hom}(E,E[l])=0\) for \(l\neq 0\). For example, any line bundle on \(X\) is exceptional. An exceptional collection \((E_1,\ldots,E_k)\) is an ordered sequence of exceptional objects satisfying \(\text{Hom}(E_m,E_n[l])=0\) for \(m>n\) and for all \(l\). The authors prove that on any Burniat surface \(X\) which is a Galois cover there exists an exceptional collection of length \(6\) consisting of line bundles \(L_i\). This implies that the orthogonal complement \(\mathcal{T}\) of this collection, that is the category of objects \(F\) satisfying \(\text{Hom}(F,L_i[l])=0\) for all \(i\) and all \(l\), has trivial Hochschild homology and finite Grothendieck group. The paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 the authors study the Picard group of a Burniat surface via its close connection to \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\) mentioned above. Section 3 recalls some well-known results concerning exceptional collections on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). In Section 4 the authors construct exceptional sequences of maximal possible length \(6\) using the results from Section 2. More precisely, they show that these sequences split into so-called blocks, similar to what happens on \(\text{Bl}_3\mathbb{P}^2\). Furthermore, denoting \(\bigoplus_i L_i\) by \(T\), the authors calculate the DG-algebra of endomorphisms of \(T\) and prove that it is formal. The latter statement implies, in particular, that the category generated by the exceptional collection does not change when the surface is varied. The paper concludes with some remarks in Section 5.
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Burniat surfaces
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exceptional objects and collections
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Hochschild homology
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Galois covers
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semiorthogonal decompositions
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DG algebras
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