I am not a specialist in singularity theory but currently I have to touch resolution of singularities and I'd like to know whether I have understood Hironaka's theorem correctly.
Let $k$ be a field of characteristic zero and $X$ an $k$-variety and $Z$ a closed subscheme of $X$. Then Hironaka's theorem claims that there exists a log-resolution $h: Y \longrightarrow X$ of the pair $(X,Z)$, by this I mean:
- $Y$ is a smooth $k$-variety.
- $h$ is projective, proper birational morphism.
- $h$ induces an isomorphism outside $X_{\mathrm{sing}} \cup Z$.
- If $E$ is the exceptional locus then $h^{-1}(Z) + E$ has strict normal crossings.
and $h$ itself can be taken to be a composition of successive blowing-ups along smooth centers.
I am interested in the following situation: let's assume we still have $(X,k)$ as above and we are given a morphism $f: X \longrightarrow \mathbb{A}^1_k$. Let $U$ be any smooth open subscheme of $X$ and $F = X \setminus U$, hence $X_{\mathrm{sing}} \subset F$ so we could take a log-resolution of the pair $(X,F \cup f^{-1}(0))$ (one may assume $f^{-1}(0)$ is nowhere dense if necessary).
Let $E_i$ ($i \in I$) be the smooth irreducible components of $h^{-1}(F \cup f^{-1}(0))$ with corresponding multiplicities $N_i \neq $ ($i \in I$) , i.e. $$h^{-1}(F \cup f^{-1}(0)) = \sum_{i \in I} N_i E_i.$$ What I want to know is can we control the multiplicities in the way that there exists $C \subset I$ such that $$h^{-1}(f^{-1}(0)) = \sum_{i \in C} N_i E_i \ \ \ \text{and} \ \ \ h^{-1}(F) = \sum_{i \in I \setminus C} N_i E_i.$$ If it is the case, then does restricting to $U$ (which gives a new resolution since blowing-ups commute with flat base-changes) lose some multiplicities? $\require{AMScd}$ \begin{CD} Y_{\mid U} @>{}>> X\\ @VVV @VVhV\\ (U,f^{-1}(0) \cap U) @>{}>> (X,F \cup f^{-1}(0)) \end{CD}