1999 | OriginalPaper | Chapter
Nondegenerate Complex Tori
Authors : Christina Birkenhake, Herbert Lange
Published in: Complex Tori
Publisher: Birkhäuser Boston
Included in: Professional Book Archive
Activate our intelligent search to find suitable subject content or patents.
Select sections of text to find matching patents with Artificial Intelligence. powered by
Select sections of text to find additional relevant content using AI-assisted search. powered by
To any smooth projective curve C one can associate an abelian variety, the Jacobian variety J(C). In [W2] Weil showed that, more generally, to any smooth projective variety M of dimension n and any p ≤ n, one can associate an abelian variety, the p-th intermediate Jacobian of M. It has, however, the disadvantage that it does not depend holomorphically on M in general. It was Griffiths’ idea to modify the definition in such a way that the new intermediate JacobianJ G P(M) varies holomorphically on with M. It is a complex torus, but in general not an abelian variety. It admits, however, a class of line bundles whose first Chern class is a nondegenerate hermitian form. This is a special case of the following situation: Let X be a complex torus of dimension g and H ∈ NS(X) a nondegenerate hermitian form. Suppose k denotes the index of H, that is, the number of negative eigenvalues of H. We call such a hermitian form a polarization of index k. (Note that in [G] H is called a k-convex polarization). If H is a polarization of index k on a complex torus X, we call the pair (X, H) a nondegenerate complex torus of index k. In view of the definition of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold [He] one might be tempted to call (X, H) a pseudo-abelian or semi-abelian variety, but these notions have already a different meaning. Note that a nondegenerate complex torus of index 0 is a polarized abelian variety. It is the aim of this chapter to derive the main properties of nondegenerate complex tori of index k.