Classification of exceptional CDQL webs (Q952128): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 19:47, 28 June 2024

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Classification of exceptional CDQL webs
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    Classification of exceptional CDQL webs (English)
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    6 November 2008
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    Consider, in the complex analytic setting, a completely decomposable global \(k\)-web on a surface \(S\), i.e. \(k\)-global foliations on \(S\). This web is called \textit{linear} if its leaves are linear and \textit{quasilinear} if it is composed by a completely decomposable linear web plus a non-linear foliation. A natural notion of rank of the web appears and the web is called \textit{exceptional} if it is of maximal rank and not equivalent to an algebraic web via a change of coordinates. The note under review contains a theorem of classification of exceptional completely decomposable quasilinear (\textit{CDQL} for simplicity) webs on the projective plane. Up to projective automorphism they consist on four countable families and thirteen sporadic examples properly listed (see theorem 3.1). This theorem can be applied to completely classify exceptional \textit{CDQL} webs on two dimensional complex tori up to isogenies.
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    webs
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    foliations
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    projective plane
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    complex tori
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