Degeneration (algebraic geometry)

In algebraic geometry, a degeneration (or specialization) is the act of taking a limit of a family of varieties. Precisely, given a morphism

:\pi: \mathcal{X} \to C,

of a variety (or a scheme) to a curve C with origin 0 (e.g., affine or projective line), the fibers

:\pi^{-1}(t)

form a family of varieties over C. Then the fiber \pi^{-1}(0) may be thought of as the limit of \pi^{-1}(t) as t \to 0. One then says the family \pi^{-1}(t), t \ne 0 degenerates to the special fiber \pi^{-1}(0). The limiting process behaves nicely when \pi is a flat morphism and, in that case, the degeneration is called a flat degeneration. Many authors assume degenerations to be flat.

When the family \pi^{-1}(t) is trivial away from a special fiber; i.e., \pi^{-1}(t) is independent of t \ne 0 up to (coherent) isomorphisms, \pi^{-1}(t), t \ne 0 is called a general fiber.

Degenerations of curves

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In the study of moduli of curves, the important point is to understand the boundaries of the moduli, which amounts to understand degenerations of curves.

Stability of invariants

Ruled-ness specializes. Precisely, Matsusaka'a theorem says

:Let X be a normal irreducible projective scheme over a discrete valuation ring. If the generic fiber is ruled, then each irreducible component of the special fiber is also ruled.

Infinitesimal deformations

Let D = k[ε] be the ring of dual numbers over a field k and Y a scheme of finite type over k. Given a closed subscheme X of Y, by definition, an embedded first-order infinitesimal deformation of X is a closed subscheme X{{'}} of Y ×Spec(k) Spec(D) such that the projection {{math|1=X{{'}} → Spec D}} is flat and has X as the special fiber.

If Y = Spec A and {{math|1=X = Spec(A/I)}} are affine, then an embedded infinitesimal deformation amounts to an ideal {{mvar|I{{'}}}} of A[ε] such that {{math|A[ε]/ I{{'}}}} is flat over D and the image of {{mvar|I{{'}}}} in A = A[ε]/ε is {{mvar|I}}.

In general, given a pointed scheme (S, 0) and a scheme X, a morphism of schemes {{pi}}: X{{'}}S is called the deformation of a scheme X if it is flat and the fiber of it over the distinguished point 0 of S is X. Thus, the above notion is a special case when S = Spec D and there is some choice of embedding.

See also

References

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  • M. Artin, [http://www.math.tifr.res.in/~publ/ln/tifr54.pdf Lectures on Deformations of Singularities] – Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, 1976
  • {{Hartshorne AG}}
  • E. Sernesi: [https://books.google.com/books/about/Deformations_of_algebraic_schemes.html?id=xkcpQo9tBN8C&hl=en Deformations of algebraic schemes]
  • M. Gross, M. Siebert, [https://arxiv.org/abs/0808.2749 An invitation to toric degenerations]
  • M. Kontsevich, Y. Soibelman: Affine structures and non-Archimedean analytic spaces, in: The unity of mathematics (P. Etingof, V. Retakh, I.M. Singer, eds.), 321–385, Progr. Math. 244, Birkh ̈auser 2006.
  • Karen E Smith, Vanishing, Singularities And Effective Bounds Via Prime Characteristic Local Algebra.
  • V. Alexeev, Ch. Birkenhake, and K. Hulek, Degenerations of Prym varieties, J. Reine Angew. Math. 553 (2002), 73–116.