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2 votes
0 answers
170 views

Singular Del Pezzo of degree 2

Throughout, singular Del Pezzo means a surface with only isolated singularities and ample anti-canonical divisor. Suppose $X$ is a singular Del Pezzo of degree 2 over a field $k$ where $\text{char}(k)\...
H U's user avatar
  • 481
1 vote
1 answer
241 views

Surfaces with rational double points

Let $S\rightarrow \mathbb{P}^1$ a surface fibered in conics over a field. Assume that $S$ has a single non reduced fiber $F$ with two points of type $A_1$ on it. Blowing-up the two points and ...
Puzzled's user avatar
  • 8,998
3 votes
1 answer
175 views

Singularities of surfaces fibered in rational curves

Let $S$ be a projective surface with a morphism $S\rightarrow\mathbb{P}^1$ whose fibers are either smooth $\mathbb{P}^1$'s or the union of two smooth $\mathbb{P}^1$'s intersecting in a point. ...
Puzzled's user avatar
  • 8,998
3 votes
1 answer
144 views

du Val singularities in Magma

Is there any way to decide whether a singularity of a surface embedded in $\mathbb{P}^5(\mathbb{Q})$ is a du Val/rational double point in Magma? Any help is much appreciated.
user476753's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
204 views

Newton polygon notation for algebraic surface singularities

In various sources (e.g. here, Theorem 1.1 and here, Theorem 2.1 (3)), a certain notation which uses a fraction followed by a tuple is used to describe surface singularities. For example, the first ...
Jim Johnson's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
493 views

General conditions for normality of blow-up

Let $X$ be an integral, affine, normal complex surface. I am looking for conditions on zero-dimensional closed subschemes $Z$ in $X$ such that the reduced scheme associated to the blow-up of $X$ along ...
Jana's user avatar
  • 2,032
1 vote
1 answer
93 views

Existence of meromorphic 2-forms over normal surface singularities

Let $(X,o)$ be an isolated normal surface singularity. Denote by $U:=X\backslash \{o\}$. I am looking for conditions on $(X,o)$ under which there exists a holomorphic section $\omega \in H^0(U, \Omega^...
Jana's user avatar
  • 2,032
3 votes
2 answers
297 views

Singularities of a central fibre of a flat family of smooth surfaces

Suppose I have a one parameter flat family of complex surfaces (regular, of general type) whose general fibre is smooth. Is it possible for the central fibre to have singularities which are not ...
R. Jahvel's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
180 views

Pushforward of structure sheaf on quotient surface singularity

Let $f:\mathbb{C}^2 \to \mathbb{C}^2/G$ be a quotient surface singularity. What properties should $G$ have such that the pushforward $f_*\mathcal{O}_{\mathbb{C}^2}$, of the structure sheaf $\mathcal{O}...
Chen's user avatar
  • 1,593
5 votes
1 answer
1k views

Are rational surface singularities $\mathbb{Q}$-Gorenstein?

I know that, in general, rational singularities are not necessarily $\mathbb{Q}$-Gorenstein. So I ask: is there any positive result in this direction known for surfaces?
Jeremy Berquist's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
433 views

Infinitesimal deformations of a singular projective surface

Let $X$ be a normal projective surface with just two singular points $x_1,x_2\in X$, where $X$ has rational quotient singularities. Assume that both the singularities in $x_1$ and in $x_2$ admit a ...
user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
269 views

Hypersurface with singularities

I heard once about one open problem. That was about existing a hypersurface of a small degree (5? or 6?) passing through some number (5? 6?) of 3-fold points and 2-fold lines (3 lines?). It was said ...
Nikita Kalinin's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
409 views

Castelnuovo's rationality criterion on singular surfaces?

Let $S$ be a projective surface over an algebraically closed field. Suppose that $q(S)=h^1(\mathcal O_S)=0$ and $P_2(S)=h^0(\mathcal O_S(2K_S))=0$. If $S$ is smooth, Castelnuovo's rationality ...
Jesus Martinez Garcia's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
341 views

Intrinsically proving a singularity is rational

In general, how to prove a variety has rational singularities intrinsically? i.e., don't use the Artin's criterion concerning the exceptional locus. And what kinds of varieties have only rational ...
user50489's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
754 views

Why can you deform singularities in two dimensions but not in higher dimensions?

I've been trying to read this paper to understand deformations of surface quotient singularities. I'm particularly interested in when one can deform certain cyclic quotient singularities into other ...
Dori Bejleri's user avatar
  • 3,290
4 votes
1 answer
983 views

Do there exist double points on an algebraic surface in $\mathbb{P}_{\mathbb{C}}^3$ that are not rational?

The title explains it all. I'm familiar with the du val singularities on surfaces, also known as rational double points. In http://homepages.warwick.ac.uk/~masda/surf/more/DuVal.pdf, 2.1, they are ...
Joachim's user avatar
  • 479
2 votes
2 answers
1k views

singularities of the dual variety of a surface

I am looking for a proof/reference of the following simple fact, which I think it holds true. Let $S\subset \mathbb{P}^n$ be a surface embedded by a very ample linear system. Then I know that the ...
IMeasy's user avatar
  • 3,779
3 votes
1 answer
236 views

Counting nodal singularities on a surface

How many lines in $\mathbf{P}^5$ passing through a fixed point $p$ meet in at least two points a fixed smooth surface $S$ given by the intersection of three quadrics? Or equivalently, calling $T$ the ...
sqrt2sqrt2's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
2k views

Q-factorial and rational singularities on surfaces

Let $X$ be a normal surface. Is any rational singularity $\mathbf{Q}$-factorial? I've seen this somewhere for surfaces over fields, but what about the general case of an integral 2-dimensional ...
Harry's user avatar
  • 1,213
5 votes
1 answer
710 views

Log resolutions on surfaces and 3-folds in characteristic p

If $X$ is a normal projective variety and $D$ a divisor in it, we say that $\pi\colon (\widetilde X,\widetilde D)\rightarrow (X,D)$ is a log resolution if $\widetilde X$ is a resolution of $X$, the ...
Jesus Martinez Garcia's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
470 views

Resolution of "nice" and zero-dimensional singularities on a surface

Assume I have a singular algebraic surface $X$ over an algebraically closed field (characteristic zero if you want) which is singular in a finite set of points. I am looking for a condition as to the ...
Jesko Hüttenhain's user avatar