Normal origamis of Mumford curves

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Publication:993404

DOI10.1007/S00229-010-0379-8zbMATH Open1207.14031arXiv1007.0666OpenAlexW2023914507MaRDI QIDQ993404FDOQ993404

Karsten Kremer

Publication date: 10 September 2010

Published in: Manuscripta Mathematica (Search for Journal in Brave)

Abstract: An origami (also known as square-tiled surface) is a Riemann surface covering a torus with at most one branch point. Lifting two generators of the fundamental group of the punctured torus decomposes the surface into finitely many unit squares. By varying the complex structure of the torus one obtains easily accessible examples of Teichm"uller curves in the moduli space of Riemann surfaces. The p-adic analogues of Riemann surfaces are Mumford curves. A p-adic origami is defined as a covering of Mumford curves with at most one branch point, where the bottom curve has genus one. A classification of all normal non-trivial p-adic origamis is presented and used to calculate some invariants. These can be used to describe p-adic origamis in terms of glueing squares.


Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1007.0666





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