Examples of wild ramification in an enriched Riemann–Hurwitz formula
Publication:3296008
DOI10.1090/conm/745/15022zbMath1441.14076arXiv1812.03386OpenAlexW3009738312MaRDI QIDQ3296008
Kirsten Wickelgren, Jesse Leo Kass, Candace Bethea
Publication date: 3 July 2020
Published in: Motivic Homotopy Theory and Refined Enumerative Geometry (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1812.03386
Riemann-Hurwitz formula\(\mathbb A^1\)-degree\(\mathbb A^1\)-Euler characteristic\(\mathbb A^1\)-indexmotivic degreemotivic Euler characteristic.motivic index
Degree, winding number (55M25) Coverings of curves, fundamental group (14H30) Motivic cohomology; motivic homotopy theory (14F42)
Related Items (7)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- \(\mathbb A^1\)-algebraic topology over a field
- Ramification of local fields with imperfect residue fields. III
- Ramification of local fields with imperfect residue fields. II
- The class of Eisenbud-Khimshiashvili-Levine is the local \(\mathbb{A}^1\)-Brouwer degree
- Motivic Gauss-Bonnet formulas
- An Abel map to the compactified Picard scheme realizes Poincaré duality
- Intrinsic signs and lower bounds in real algebraic geometry
- Homotopy classes of rational functions
- Comparing Euler Classes
- Groupes de Chow-Witt
- Algebraic homotopy classes of rational functions
- Groupe de Chow des cycles orientés et classe d'Euler des fibrés vectoriels
- An arithmetic count of the lines meeting four lines in 𝐏³
This page was built for publication: Examples of wild ramification in an enriched Riemann–Hurwitz formula