Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options not deleted user 88133

Algebraic varieties, stacks, sheaves, schemes, moduli spaces, complex geometry, quantum cohomology.

9 votes
Accepted

Is the Grassmannian contained in a Plücker hyperplane?

The Grassmannian in its Plücker embedding spans the space. The space $\mathbb{P}^{\binom{n}{k}-1}$ of alternating tensors is spanned by the simple wedges (also called decomposable) $v_1 \wedge \dotsb …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
0 votes
Accepted

Six stacked circles, not quite symmetrical

I don't know if this is really research-level math, but here is a quick answer. For each $i=1,\dotsc,6$, let $P_i$ be the center of circle (i) and write $P_i=(x_i,y_i)$. We have $P_1=(-1,0)$, $P_3=(1, …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
5 votes
Accepted

A seemingly Groebnerizable problem

In characteristic zero, a point $a$ is in $\mathcal{Q}$ if and only if $p$ vanishes identically on each line through $a$ parallel to one of the coordinate axes, i.e., all lines given by fixing all but …
4 votes
Accepted

Can the degree of an affine variety increase after intersecting with a hyperplane?

Yes, it is possible for the degree to increase. Say $V \subset \mathbb{C}^3$ is reducible: a union of a curve of degree $d$ plus one more point that doesn't lie on the curve. Then $V$ has degree $d$. …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
3 votes
Accepted

Is the pre-closure of the join of two projective varieties quasi-projective?

No. The pre-closure of the join of two irreducible projective varieties is NOT necessarily quasi-projective. Let $X$ be a smooth plane conic and let $Y$ be a single point of $X$. The pre-closure of th …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
7 votes

Sum of a big divisor and a pseudo-effective divisor

Theorem 2.2.26 of Lazarsfeld's Positivity in Algebraic Geometry, 2004, is the following: Theorem: The big cone is the interior of the pseudoeffective cone and the pseudoeffective cone is the closure …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
7 votes
Accepted

Classification of curves whose tangent spaces are large

If $Z$ is a pure one-dimensional closed subscheme of degree $d$ in projective space, with $d$-dimensional tangent space at every closed point, then $Z$ is supported on a line. To see this, let $H$ be …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
1 vote

Existence of curve nodal at given set of points

The curve upstairs (hyperplane section) is smooth I think so its projection (the curve downstairs) is evidently resolved by a single blowup along $Z$. So I believe that makes it nodal --- non-nodal si …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
4 votes
Accepted

Question about properties of affine varieties defined by bihomogeneous polynomials

Since each $F_i(u_1,\dotsc,u_{n_1},v_1,\dotsc,v_{n_2})=0$, then $F_i(su_1,\dotsc,su_{n_1},tv_1,\dotsc,tv_{n_2}) = s^{d_1}t^{d_2} F_i(u_1,\dotsc,u_{n_1},v_1,\dotsc,v_{n_2})=s^{d_1}t^{d_2}0 = 0$. So ce …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
2 votes

How to use Hilbert series to count combinatorial objects?

See: Mordechai Katzman, Counting monomials This paper presents two enumeration techniques based on Hilbert functions. The paper illustrates these techniques by solving two chessboard problems.
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
2 votes

Veronese and Segre

One way to think of the Segre map $\mathbb{P}^{n_1} \times \dotsm \times \mathbb{P}^{n_s} \to \mathbb{P}^N$ is as the map corresponding to multiplication of linear forms. By this I mean, for each $i=1 …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
2 votes

supporting facts to fujita conjecture

The basepoint freeness part has been proved in dimension $5$ by Fei Ye and Zhixian Zhu, On Fujita's freeness conjecture in dimension $5$, Adv. Math., 2020 DOI:10.1016/j.aim.2020.107210, arXiv:1511.091 …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
9 votes
Accepted

Is a flattening rank a lower bound for the border rank?

Yes, the flattening rank is a lower bound for border rank. First note that flattening rank is a lower bound for rank. If $T$ is a decomposable tensor (simple tensor, rank one tensor) then every flatt …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
7 votes
Accepted

Is the Waring rank homogeneous polynomials sub-multiplicative?

You asked: Is $W(P \otimes Q) \leq W(P) W(Q)$ for two homogeneous polynomials $P$ and $Q$? First, I think you have to be a little bit careful about the difference between tensor product and mult …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237
3 votes

Sum of initial ideals

Some authors write $\operatorname{in}_<(f)$ to mean the largest term of $f$, and other authors write $\operatorname{in}_<(f)$ to mean the smallest term of $f$. (Some authors say "leading term".) In yo …
Zach Teitler's user avatar
  • 6,237

15 30 50 per page