Logarithmic form

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In algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, a logarithmic differential form is a differential form with poles of a certain kind. The concept was introduced by Pierre Deligne.[1] In short, logarithmic differentials have the mildest possible singularities needed in order to give information about an open submanifold (the complement of the divisor of poles). (This idea is made precise by several versions of de Rham's theorem discussed below.) Let X be a complex manifold, DX a reduced divisor (a sum of distinct codimension-1 complex subspaces), and ω a holomorphic p-form on XD. If both ω and dω have a pole of order at most 1 along D, then ω is said to have a logarithmic pole along D. ω is also known as a logarithmic p-form. The p-forms with log poles along D form a subsheaf of the meromorphic p-forms on X, denoted

ΩXp(logD).

The name comes from the fact that in complex analysis, d(logz)=dz/z; here dz/z is a typical example of a 1-form on the complex numbers C with a logarithmic pole at the origin. Differential forms such as dz/z make sense in a purely algebraic context, where there is no analog of the logarithm function.

Logarithmic de Rham complex

Let X be a complex manifold and D a reduced divisor on X. By definition of ΩXp(logD) and the fact that the exterior derivative d satisfies d2 = 0, one has

dΩXp(logD)(U)ΩXp+1(logD)(U)

for every open subset U of X. Thus the logarithmic differentials form a complex of sheaves (ΩX(logD),d), known as the logarithmic de Rham complex associated to the divisor D. This is a subcomplex of the direct image j*(ΩXD), where j:XDX is the inclusion and ΩXD is the complex of sheaves of holomorphic forms on XD. Of special interest is the case where D has normal crossings: that is, D is locally a sum of codimension-1 complex submanifolds that intersect transversely. In this case, the sheaf of logarithmic differential forms is the subalgebra of j*(ΩXD) generated by the holomorphic differential forms ΩX together with the 1-forms df/f for holomorphic functions f that are nonzero outside D.[2] Note that

d(fg)fg=dff+dgg.

Concretely, if D is a divisor with normal crossings on a complex manifold X, then each point x has an open neighborhood U on which there are holomorphic coordinate functions z1,,zn such that x is the origin and D is defined by the equation z1zk=0 for some 0kn. On the open set U, sections of ΩX1(logD) are given by[3]

ΩX1(logD)=𝒪Xdz1z1𝒪Xdzkzk𝒪Xdzk+1𝒪Xdzn.

This describes the holomorphic vector bundle ΩX1(logD) on X. Then, for any k0, the vector bundle ΩXk(logD) is the kth exterior power,

ΩXk(logD)=kΩX1(logD).

The logarithmic tangent bundle TX(logD) means the dual vector bundle to ΩX1(logD). Explicitly, a section of TX(logD) is a holomorphic vector field on X that is tangent to D at all smooth points of D.[4]

Logarithmic differentials and singular cohomology

Let X be a complex manifold and D a divisor with normal crossings on X. Deligne proved a holomorphic analog of de Rham's theorem in terms of logarithmic differentials. Namely,

Hk(X,ΩX(logD))Hk(XD,C),

where the left side denotes the cohomology of X with coefficients in a complex of sheaves, sometimes called hypercohomology. This follows from the natural inclusion of complexes of sheaves

ΩX(logD)j*ΩXD

being a quasi-isomorphism.[5]

Logarithmic differentials in algebraic geometry

In algebraic geometry, the vector bundle of logarithmic differential p-forms ΩXp(logD) on a smooth scheme X over a field, with respect to a divisor D=Dj with simple normal crossings, is defined as above: sections of ΩXp(logD) are (algebraic) differential forms ω on XD such that both ω and dω have a pole of order at most one along D.[6] Explicitly, for a closed point x that lies in Dj for 1jk and not in Dj for j>k, let uj be regular functions on some open neighborhood U of x such that Dj is the closed subscheme defined by uj=0 inside U for 1jk, and x is the closed subscheme of U defined by u1==un=0. Then a basis of sections of ΩX1(logD) on U is given by:

du1u1,,dukuk,duk+1,,dun.

This describes the vector bundle ΩX1(logD) on X, and then ΩXp(logD) is the pth exterior power of ΩX1(logD). There is an exact sequence of coherent sheaves on X:

0ΩX1ΩX1(logD)βj(ij)*𝒪Dj0,

where ij:DjX is the inclusion of an irreducible component of D. Here β is called the residue map; so this sequence says that a 1-form with log poles along D is regular (that is, has no poles) if and only if its residues are zero. More generally, for any p ≥ 0, there is an exact sequence of coherent sheaves on X:

0ΩXpΩXp(logD)βj(ij)*ΩDjp1(log(DDj))0,

where the sums run over all irreducible components of given dimension of intersections of the divisors Dj. Here again, β is called the residue map. Explicitly, on an open subset of X that only meets one component Dj of D, with Dj locally defined by f=0, the residue of a logarithmic p-form along Dj is determined by: the residue of a regular p-form is zero, whereas

ResDj(dffα)=α|Dj

for any regular (p1)-form α.[7] Some authors define the residue by saying that α(df/f) has residue α|Dj, which differs from the definition here by the sign (1)p1.

Example of the residue

Over the complex numbers, the residue of a differential form with log poles along a divisor Dj can be viewed as the result of integration over loops in X around Dj. In this context, the residue may be called the Poincaré residue. For an explicit example,[8] consider an elliptic curve D in the complex projective plane P2={[x,y,z]}, defined in affine coordinates z=1 by the equation g(x,y)=y2f(x)=0, where f(x)=x(x1)(xλ) and λ0,1 is a complex number. Then D is a smooth hypersurface of degree 3 in P2 and, in particular, a divisor with simple normal crossings. There is a meromorphic 2-form on P2 given in affine coordinates by

ω=dxdyg(x,y),

which has log poles along D. Because the canonical bundle KP2=ΩP22 is isomorphic to the line bundle 𝒪(3), the divisor of poles of ω must have degree 3. So the divisor of poles of ω consists only of D (in particular, ω does not have a pole along the line z=0 at infinity). The residue of ω along D is given by the holomorphic 1-form

ResD(ω)=dyg/x|D=dxg/y|D=12dxy|D.

It follows that dx/y|D extends to a holomorphic one-form on the projective curve D in P2, an elliptic curve. The residue map H0(P2,ΩP22(logD))H0(D,ΩD1) considered here is part of a linear map H2(P2D,C)H1(D,C), which may be called the "Gysin map". This is part of the Gysin sequence associated to any smooth divisor D in a complex manifold X:

Hj2(D)Hj(X)Hj(XD)Hj1(D).

Historical terminology

In the 19th-century theory of elliptic functions, 1-forms with logarithmic poles were sometimes called integrals of the second kind (and, with an unfortunate inconsistency, sometimes differentials of the third kind). For example, the Weierstrass zeta function associated to a lattice Λ in C was called an "integral of the second kind" to mean that it could be written

ζ(z)=σ(z)σ(z).

In modern terms, it follows that ζ(z)dz=dσ/σ is a 1-form on C with logarithmic poles on Λ, since Λ is the zero set of the Weierstrass sigma function σ(z).

Mixed Hodge theory for smooth varieties

Over the complex numbers, Deligne proved a strengthening of Alexander Grothendieck's algebraic de Rham theorem, relating coherent sheaf cohomology with singular cohomology. Namely, for any smooth scheme X over C with a divisor with simple normal crossings D, there is a natural isomorphism

Hk(X,ΩX(logD))Hk(XD,C)

for each integer k, where the groups on the left are defined using the Zariski topology and the groups on the right use the classical (Euclidean) topology.[9] Moreover, when X is smooth and proper over C, the resulting spectral sequence

E1pq=Hq(X,ΩXp(logD))Hp+q(XD,C)

degenerates at E1.[10] So the cohomology of XD with complex coefficients has a decreasing filtration, the Hodge filtration, whose associated graded vector spaces are the algebraically defined groups Hq(X,ΩXp(logD)). This is part of the mixed Hodge structure which Deligne defined on the cohomology of any complex algebraic variety. In particular, there is also a weight filtration on the rational cohomology of XD. The resulting filtration on H*(XD,C) can be constructed using the logarithmic de Rham complex. Namely, define an increasing filtration WΩXp(logD) by

WmΩXp(logD)={0m<0ΩXpmΩXm(logD)0mpΩXp(logD)mp.

The resulting filtration on cohomology is the weight filtration:[11]

WmHk(XD,C)=Im(Hk(X,WmkΩX(logD))Hk(XD,C)).

Building on these results, Hélène Esnault and Eckart Viehweg generalized the Kodaira–Akizuki–Nakano vanishing theorem in terms of logarithmic differentials. Namely, let X be a smooth complex projective variety of dimension n, D a divisor with simple normal crossings on X, and L an ample line bundle on X. Then

Hq(X,ΩXp(logD)L)=0

and

Hq(X,ΩXp(logD)OX(D)L)=0

for all p+q>n.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. Deligne (1970), section II.3.
  2. Deligne (1970), Definition II.3.1.
  3. Peters & Steenbrink (2008), section 4.1.
  4. Deligne (1970), section II.3.9.
  5. Deligne (1970), Proposition II.3.13.
  6. Deligne (1970), Lemma II.3.2.1.
  7. Deligne (1970), sections II.3.5 to II.3.7; Griffiths & Harris (1994), section 1.1.
  8. Griffiths & Harris (1994), section 2.1.
  9. Deligne (1970), Corollaire II.6.10.
  10. Deligne (1971), Corollaire 3.2.13.
  11. Peters & Steenbrink (2008), Theorem 4.2.
  12. Esnault & Viehweg (1992), Corollary 6.4.

References

  • Deligne, Pierre (1970), Equations Différentielles à Points Singuliers Réguliers, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 163, Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/BFb0061194, ISBN 3540051902, MR 0417174, OCLC 169357
  • Deligne, Pierre (1971), "Théorie de Hodge II", Publ. Math. IHÉS, 40: 5–57, doi:10.1007/BF02684692, MR 0498551, S2CID 118967613
  • Esnault, Hélène; Viehweg, Eckart (1992), Lectures on vanishing theorems, Birkhäuser, doi:10.1007/978-3-0348-8600-0, ISBN 978-3-7643-2822-1, MR 1193913
  • Griffiths, Phillip; Harris, Joseph (1994) [1978], Principles of algebraic geometry, Wiley Classics Library, Wiley Interscience, doi:10.1002/9781118032527, ISBN 0-471-05059-8, MR 0507725
  • Peters, Chris A.M.; Steenbrink, Joseph H. M. (2008), Mixed Hodge structures, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge / A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics, vol. 52, Springer, doi:10.1007/978-3-540-77017-6, ISBN 978-3-540-77017-6, MR 2393625

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