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Geometric Invariant Theory for Polarized Curves [electronic resource] / by Gilberto Bini, Fabio Felici, Margarida Melo, Filippo Viviani.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Mathematics ; 2122Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: X, 211 p. 17 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783319113371
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 516.35 23
LOC classification:
  • QA564-609
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction -- Singular Curves -- Combinatorial Results -- Preliminaries on GIT -- Potential Pseudo-stability Theorem -- Stabilizer Subgroups -- Behavior at the Extremes of the Basic Inequality -- A Criterion of Stability for Tails -- Elliptic Tails and Tacnodes with a Line -- A Strati_cation of the Semistable Locus -- Semistable, Polystable and Stable Points (part I) -- Stability of Elliptic Tails -- Semistable, Polystable and Stable Points (part II) -- Geometric Properties of the GIT Quotient -- Extra Components of the GIT Quotient -- Compacti_cations of the Universal Jacobian -- Appendix: Positivity Properties of Balanced Line Bundles.  .
In: Springer eBooksSummary: We investigate GIT quotients of polarized curves. More specifically, we study the GIT problem for the Hilbert and Chow schemes of curves of degree d and genus g in a projective space of dimension d-g, as d decreases with respect to g. We prove that the first three values of d at which the GIT quotients change are given by d=a(2g-2) where a=2, 3.5, 4. We show that, for a>4, L. Caporaso's results hold true for both Hilbert and Chow semistability. If 3.5<a<4, the Hilbert semistable locus coincides with the Chow semistable locus and it maps to the moduli stack of weakly-pseudo-stable curves. If 2<a<3.5, the Hilbert and Chow semistable loci coincide and they map to the moduli stack of pseudo-stable curves. We also analyze in detail the critical values a=3.5 and a=4, where the Hilbert semistable locus is strictly smaller than the Chow semistable locus. As an application, we obtain three compactications of the universal Jacobian over the moduli space of stable curves, weakly-pseudo-stable curves and pseudo-stable curves, respectively.
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Introduction -- Singular Curves -- Combinatorial Results -- Preliminaries on GIT -- Potential Pseudo-stability Theorem -- Stabilizer Subgroups -- Behavior at the Extremes of the Basic Inequality -- A Criterion of Stability for Tails -- Elliptic Tails and Tacnodes with a Line -- A Strati_cation of the Semistable Locus -- Semistable, Polystable and Stable Points (part I) -- Stability of Elliptic Tails -- Semistable, Polystable and Stable Points (part II) -- Geometric Properties of the GIT Quotient -- Extra Components of the GIT Quotient -- Compacti_cations of the Universal Jacobian -- Appendix: Positivity Properties of Balanced Line Bundles.  .

We investigate GIT quotients of polarized curves. More specifically, we study the GIT problem for the Hilbert and Chow schemes of curves of degree d and genus g in a projective space of dimension d-g, as d decreases with respect to g. We prove that the first three values of d at which the GIT quotients change are given by d=a(2g-2) where a=2, 3.5, 4. We show that, for a>4, L. Caporaso's results hold true for both Hilbert and Chow semistability. If 3.5<a<4, the Hilbert semistable locus coincides with the Chow semistable locus and it maps to the moduli stack of weakly-pseudo-stable curves. If 2<a<3.5, the Hilbert and Chow semistable loci coincide and they map to the moduli stack of pseudo-stable curves. We also analyze in detail the critical values a=3.5 and a=4, where the Hilbert semistable locus is strictly smaller than the Chow semistable locus. As an application, we obtain three compactications of the universal Jacobian over the moduli space of stable curves, weakly-pseudo-stable curves and pseudo-stable curves, respectively.

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