Local weak simultaneous resolution for high rational ranks (Q1368047): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Added link to MaRDI item. |
Removed claim: reviewed by (P1447): Item:Q351416 |
||
Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Carlos Galindo Pastor / rank | |||
Revision as of 12:04, 13 February 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Local weak simultaneous resolution for high rational ranks |
scientific article |
Statements
Local weak simultaneous resolution for high rational ranks (English)
0 references
7 April 1999
0 references
In 1956, Abhyankar stated his local weak simultaneous resolution theorem for algebraic surfaces. By using this theorem, he was able to eliminate the use of Zariski's factorization theorem for proving the local uniformization theorem for algebraic surfaces (a step in Zariski's plan for proving resolution of singularities). The author thinks that generalizing the local weak simultaneous resolution theorem could be useful to show local uniformization for higher-dimensional varieties since Zariski's factorization theorem is not true for these varieties. In this sense, he gives a partial generalization which does not account for all possible rational ranks. The concrete result (section 3 of the paper) which is proved from a monomialization theorem for ordered semigroups (section 2) is the following: Let \(K\) be an \(n\)-dimensional function field over an algebraically closed field \(k\). Assume that either the characteristic of \(k\) is zero or that it is positive and \(n\leq 3\). Let \(L/K\) be a finite algebraic extension. Let \(v\) be a valuation of \(L/k\) with \(k\)-dimension zero, rational rank \(r\), and valuation ring \(V\). Let \((S,N)\subset L\) be an \(n\)-dimensional local ring over \(k\) which is birationally dominated by \(V\). Let \(R=S\cap K\), \(M=N\cap K\), \(U=V\cap K\) and \(Q=MS\). (1) If \(r=n\), then \(S\) can be replaced by an iterated monoidal transform along \(v\) so that \(Q\) is \(N\)-primary; (2) If \(r<n\), then \(S\) can be replaced by an iterated monoidal transform along \(v\) so that \(\text{ht} Q\geq r+1\). In particular, if \(r=n-1\), then for such a transform \(Q\) is \(N\)-primary.
0 references
simultaneous resolution
0 references
valuations
0 references
monomialization
0 references
local uniformization
0 references
function field
0 references