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I am interested in compactification of the moduli space of elliptic curves, and I heard that Log geometry is very important for the problem. I am developping the same technique for quantum geometry.

My question was that:

1-Why Log structure can give us a better way to understand degeneration of Elliptic curves? What's the motivation behind?

Is that right that log structure gives us a way to embed the scheme locally into affine space, and the degeneration happens in the space? Like the log structure on $N^2\rightarrow k[x,y]/x.y=0.$, which is fibered over $N\rightarrow k$. In that case, the fourier transform maps $N^2$ into $A^2$, which is the embeding of the nodal curve.

2-Does it make sense to define log-group, i.e. a group with a log structure.

3-Does it make sense to define log structure on a stack which is not algebraic?

Reference for Log geometry: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~satriano/logcurves.pdf

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  • $\begingroup$ Maybe you should explain what $N$ and $A$ are? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 20, 2011 at 9:38
  • $\begingroup$ N is just the natural numbers, and A is affine line. It mean $k[N^2]\cong k[x,y]\cong O(A^2)$. It's monoid analog of the Pontryagin duality between Z and $S^1$ $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 20, 2011 at 10:11

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  1. Read the introduction in the Kato-Usui book. It's got some nice motivating examples, including a degenerating family of elliptic curves with pictures.

  2. There is no problem with defining a group object in the category of log schemes.

  3. This depends on what you want to do with such a structure, i.e., what properties you need. Maybe you should familiarize yourself with the algebraic case first (e.g., in Olsson's paper Logarithmic geometry and algebraic stacks).

Finally, Matt's notes are a nice introduction, but I hesitate to call them a reference. You might want to look at Ogus's book or Kato's original paper.

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