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2009 | Buch

Tropical Algebraic Geometry

verfasst von: Illia Itenberg, Grigory Mikhalkin, Eugenii Shustin

Verlag: Birkhäuser Basel

Buchreihe : Oberwolfach Seminars

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Über dieses Buch

This book is based on the lectures given at the Oberwolfach Seminar on Tropical Algebraic Geometry in October 2004. Tropical Geometry ?rst appeared as a subject of its own in 2002, while its roots can be traced back at least to Bergman’s work [1] on logarithmic limit sets. Tropical Geometry is now a rapidly developing area of mathematics. It is int- twined with algebraic and symplectic geometry, geometric combinatorics, in- grablesystems, and statistical physics. Tropical Geometry can be viewed as a sort of algebraic geometry with the underlying algebra based on the so-called tropical numbers. The tropicalnumbers (the term “tropical” comesfrom computer science and commemorates Brazil, in particular a contribution of the Brazilian school to the language recognition problem) are the real numbers enhanced with negative in?nity and equipped with two arithmetic operations called tropical addition and tropical multiplication. The tropical addition is the operation of taking the m- imum. The tropical multiplication is the conventional addition. These operations are commutative, associative and satisfy the distribution law. It turns out that such tropical algebra describes some meaningful geometric objects, namely, the Tropical Varieties. From the topological point of view the tropical varieties are piecewise-linearpolyhedral complexes equipped with a particular geometric str- ture coming from tropical algebra. From the point of view of complex geometry this geometric structure is the worst possible degeneration of complex structure on a manifold.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction to tropical geometry
Abstract
In this section the notion of an amoeba of a variety will be introduced and several examples of such amoebas are given. Then we consider a degenerations process where an amoeba becomes a piecewise-linear object.
Chapter 2. Patchworking of algebraic varieties
Abstract
Consider the diagram
https://static-content.springer.com/image/chp%3A10.1007%2F978-3-0346-0048-4_2/978-3-0346-0048-4_2_Equa_HTML.gif
where Y is a germ of a 1-parameter flat1 family of algebraic varieties with dim Y≥3, such that the fibres Y t are reduced irreducible for t#0, and the central fibre Y0 splits into a few reduced components. Further on, X is a germ of a 1-parameter flat family of subvarieties X t у Yt for t ∈ (ℂ, 0). When considering the diagram (2.1) over the reals, we assume that X and Y are equipped with a complex conjugation which commutes with the projections, and we restrict the parameter range to t ∈ [0, τ), τ>0, taking the respective preimages in X and Y.
Chapter 3. Applications of tropical geometry to enumerative geometry
Abstract
The main purpose of this chapter is to present several applications of tropical geometry in enumerative geometry. The idea to use tropical curves in enumerative questions, and in particular in classical questions of enumeration of algebraic curves (satisfying some constraints) in algebraic varieties was suggested by M. Kontsevich. This idea was realized by G. Mikhalkin [40, 42] who established an appropriate correspondence theorem between the complex algebraix world and the tropical one. This correspondence allows one to calculate Gromov-Witten type invariants of toric surfaces, namely, to enumerate certain nodal complex curves of a given genus which pass through given points in a general position in a toric surface. Roughly speaking, Mikhalkin’s theorem affirms that the number of complex curves in question is equal to the number of their tropical analogs passing through given points in a general position in R2 and counted with multiplicities. In addition, [40] suggests a combinatorial algorithm for an enumeration of the required tropical curves. An extension of Mikhalkin’s correspondence theorem to the case of rational curves in toric varieties was proposed by T. Nishinon and B. Siebert in [48].
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Tropical Algebraic Geometry
verfasst von
Illia Itenberg
Grigory Mikhalkin
Eugenii Shustin
Copyright-Jahr
2009
Verlag
Birkhäuser Basel
Electronic ISBN
978-3-0346-0048-4
Print ISBN
978-3-0346-0047-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0346-0048-4

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