Skip to main content
2 of 2
added 647 characters in body; added 77 characters in body
Wanderer
  • 5.2k
  • 40
  • 49

Elliptic surface with $\kappa = 1$

I have two "rookie questions" about elliptic surfaces:

  1. Let $S$ be an elliptic surface over $\mathbb{C}$, i.e. a smooth, projective algebraic surface equipped with a morphism $f: S \to C$ to a curve $C$ such that the generic fibre is an elliptic curve over $\mathbb{C}(C)$. The Kodaira dimension of an elliptic surface is at most $1$ (but can be $0$ or $-\infty$). If one asks that $g(C) \geq 2$, does this force the Kodaira dimension to be equal to $1$, or can it still be $0$ or $-\infty$?

  2. A minimal elliptic surface is usually defined to be an elliptic surface which does not contain any vertical $(-1)$-curves, i.e. $(-1)$-curves contained in the fibres of the morphism $f: S \to C$. However there can be horizontal $(-1)$-curves. Does contracting such a curve always give another elliptic surface? If the Kodaira dimension is $1$ then this is certainly the case since it is a birational invariant. How do the fibres change in this case? I mean, they still have to be elliptic curves, but I don't have a very clear picture of what the relationship between the "new" and the "old" fibres is. I guess $C$ will not change, but I just can't imagine how the picture looks.

Wanderer
  • 5.2k
  • 40
  • 49