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Let $X$ be a variety over some algebraically closed field $k$. In order to define the intersection product of the Chow ring one usually demands $X$ to be smooth. This is for example well explained by Fulton in his book Intersection Theory.

I was wondering whether it is possible to weaken this assumption. I would like it to work on normal varieties but I guess that is too much to hope for. Generalizations that only work on small dimensional varieties might also be helpful for me.

In my specific situation I also have a birational map $f:X \to Y$ where $Y$ is a smooth variety. However, I'm unsure whether this helps at all for defining the product.

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4 Answers 4

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One thing that works under pretty general conditions is intersecting curves with $\mathbb Q$-Cartier divisors. This covers for instance the example mentioned by David.

Just in case:
Definition Let $X$ be a normal variety and $D$ a Weil divisor on $X$. Then $D$ is called $\mathbb Q$-Cartier if there exists an $m\in\mathbb N$ such that $mD$ is Cartier. A normal variety $X$ is called $\mathbb Q$-factorial if all Weil divisors are $\mathbb Q$-Cartier.

Now if $X$ is a normal variety, $D$ is a $\mathbb Q$-Cartier divisor on $X$ and $C\subset X$ is a proper curve, then one can define $$ C\cdot D := \frac {C\cdot mD}m $$ for any $m$ such that $mD$ is a Cartier divisor and of course $C\cdot mD$ is defined the usual way: If $L$ is a Cartier divisor and $\gamma:\widetilde C\to C$ is the normalization of $C$, then $$ C\cdot L:= \deg_{\widetilde C} \ \gamma^*\left(\mathscr O_X(L)|_C\right). $$

In David's example a line through the singular point is not Cartier, but twice the line is, because it is linearly equivalent to the hyperplane section. The intersection of a hyperplane section and a line is clearly $1$, so the intersection of two lines through the singular point has to be $\dfrac 12$.

It turns out that $\mathbb Q$-factorial varieties exist in large numbers. For instance the minimal model program (this is currently in char $0$) produces $\mathbb Q$-factorial varieties and there is even a process of $\mathbb Q$-factorialization, which is a partial resolution and on not too bad singularities it is actually a small resolution, so the divisors are not effected.

In the particular case of a normal surface this means that if it is $\mathbb Q$-factorial, then you can intersect any two $1$-cycles, but of course the intersection numbers may be rational numbers and not integers even between integral curves. Although the intersection between a Cartier divisor and an integral curve will still always be an integer.

For a concrete example one can mention that rational surface singularities are always $\mathbb Q$-factorial. The example in David's answer falls in this category. (This is not true in higher dimensions).

As far as trying to use the resolution, the problem is that pulling back cycles does not respect linear equivalence. The only reasonable way to do it is that Cartier divisors can be pulled back as line bundles and then you can extend this numerically to $\mathbb Q$-Cartier divisors. However, then you're back to the same restriction as above.

Alternatively, one can try numerical pull-back as in Sakai's paper mentioned by Francesco. I am not sure how well that works in higher dimensions. I think Batyrev had some work on that and more recently Araujo. I don't remember off the top of my head.

For problems with trying to intersect with non-$\mathbb Q$-Cartier divisors see Tom G's answer.

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  • $\begingroup$ Do you know if this process of $\mathbb{Q}$-factorialization only works in char $0$? I would be completely fine, if I could resolve to some $\mathbb{Q}$-factorial variety and do intersection there. The issue is that in char $0$ I could just take a resolution, but I want to extend my result to positive characteristic. $\endgroup$ Mar 7, 2012 at 10:17
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    $\begingroup$ I believe at the moment it is only known in char 0 (and actually even there only since a few years ago), but conjectured to hold in general. Several people currently work on extending the methods and tools to char p right now, but it's hard to tell when it will yield results. As far as $\mathbb Q$-factorialization vs ressolution is concerned, the first has the advantage that it is "smaller". If the singularities are not too bad, then it is a small morphism, meaning that there are no exceptional divisors and so pull-back and proper transform are the same and so it is clear what divisor to take. $\endgroup$ Mar 7, 2012 at 15:18
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Intersections of Weil divisors in normal surfaces wind up lying in $\mathbb{Q}$ rather than $\mathbb{Z}$. Here is the basic example of why:

Consider the projective closure of $\mathrm{Spec} \ k[x,y,z]/(xz-y^2)$. The group of Weil divisors is generated by the ideal class $D:=\langle x,y \rangle$. The group of Cartier divisors is the subgroup of index $2$, generated by $\langle x \rangle$.

Suppose that we want to intersect two generators of the group of Cartier divisors, say $\langle x \rangle$ and $\langle z \rangle$. The answer is $2$. Here are two ways to obtain this: (Method 1) The subvarieties are both locally principal (i.e. they are Cartier) and their supports are transverse, so there is no higher Tor between them. So the intersection is just the length of $k[x,y,z]/(xz-y^2, x,z) = k[y]/y^2$, which has length $2$. (Method 2) Perturb the subvarieties to $x-\epsilon$ and $z-\epsilon$. Then they meet transversely, away from the singularity, at the two points $(x,y,z)=(\epsilon, \pm \epsilon, \epsilon)$.

Similarly, one can check that $\langle x,y \rangle$ and $\langle z \rangle$ meet with multiplicity $1$.

So, in order to be linear, the intersection product of $\langle x,y \rangle$ and $\langle y,z \rangle$ must be $1/2$.

By the way, I'll mention a musing I've had and never pursued. Let $R = k[x,y,z]/(xz-y^2)$. One can show that $\mathrm{Tor}^j(R/\langle x,y \rangle, R/\langle y,z \rangle) \cong k$ for all $j$. So trying to use Serre's intersection formula produces $1-1+1-1+1-1+\cdots$. Any student of divergent series knows that this sum is $1/2$. Is there a theorem hiding here?

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    $\begingroup$ Nice answer! No doubt you are now aware that there is indeed a theorem behind your musing (arxiv.org/abs/1507.08928), but maybe this comment will be useful for future readers. $\endgroup$
    – ssx
    Apr 27, 2020 at 15:39
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For normal surfaces there is a version of the intersection product on the group of (Weil) divisors, developed by Sakai using some ideas of Mumford.

See F. Sakai, Weil divisors on normal surfaces, Duke Math. J. Volume 51, Number 4 (1984), 877-887.

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  • $\begingroup$ Am I correct that this only works over $\mathbb{C}$? Sadly, I try to avoid reducing to characteristic $0$. $\endgroup$ Mar 6, 2012 at 16:14
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    $\begingroup$ Benjamin: At least in Mumford's original approach, you need resolution of singularities and negative definiteness of the intersection matrix for exceptional divisors (which follows from the Hodge index theorem). Both resolution and Hodge index are valid for surfaces in arbitrary characteristic. $\endgroup$ Mar 6, 2012 at 16:36
  • $\begingroup$ For surfaces, resolution of singularities holds in any characteristic; even in mixed characteristic, for arithmetic surfaces. $\endgroup$
    – ACL
    Mar 6, 2012 at 21:34
  • $\begingroup$ A short summary of the intersection theory on normal surfaces can be found in Section 1.1 of Adrian Langer's recent paper arxiv.org/abs/2310.04761. This includes the case of surfaces over non-perfect fields. The theory can also be found in Fulton's book (Ex 7.1.16, 8.3.11). $\endgroup$
    – David Rydh
    Dec 8, 2023 at 14:33
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Normal is not enough to define an intersection product in higher dimensions. In Fulton, I think you can find the example of a cone over a quadric surface on which it is impossible to define a well behaved intersection theory. (Intersecting a plane over a line of one ruling with a line of the opposite ruling should give one point, but intersecting with a line of the same ruling should give zero. Unfortunately, a line in one ruling is rationally equivalent to a line in the other ruling, since you can deform either to be a line through the vertex.)

On the other hand, if you have a morphism to a smooth variety Y, you can at least intersect any cycle on X with the pullback of a cycle on Y. Perhaps this will be enough for you?

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    $\begingroup$ That cone is the typical example of a non-$\mathbb Q$-factorial singularity. See my answer below how this is relevant. $\endgroup$ Mar 6, 2012 at 18:32
  • $\begingroup$ Yes, this example can be found in Fulton's introduction to intersection theory (end of section 5.2, p. 41). For this cone, moving lemmas also fail (Fulton 11.4.7) and Serre's multiplicity conjecture is false (Dutta–Hochster–McLaughlin 1985). $\endgroup$
    – David Rydh
    Dec 8, 2023 at 14:54

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