In algebraic geometry, Hironaka's example is a non-Kรคhler complex manifold that is a deformation of Kรคhler manifolds found by Heisuke Hironakaย (1960, 1962). Hironaka's example can be used to show that several other plausible statements holding for smooth varieties of dimension at most 2 fail for smooth varieties of dimension at least 3.
Hironaka's example
editTake two smooth curves C and D in a smooth projective 3-fold P, intersecting in two points c and d that are nodes for the reducible curve ย . For some applications these should be chosen so that there is a fixed-point-free automorphism exchanging the curves C and D and also exchanging the points c and d. Hironaka's example V is obtained by gluing two quasi-projective varieties ย and ย . Let ย be the variety obtained by blowing up ย along ย and then along the strict transform of ย , and let ย be the variety obtained by blowing up ย along D and then along the strict transform of C. Since these are isomorphic over ย , they can be glued, which results in a proper variety V. Then V has two smooth rational curves L and M lying over c and d such that ย is algebraically equivalent to 0, so V cannot be projective.
For an explicit example of this configuration, take t to be a point of order 2 in an elliptic curve E, take P to be ย , take C and D to be the sets of points of the form ย and ย , so that c and d are the points (0,0,0) and ย , and take the involution ฯ to be the one taking ย to ย .
A complete abstract variety that is not projective
editHironaka's variety is a smooth 3-dimensional complete variety but is not projective as it has a non-trivial curve algebraically equivalent to 0. Any 2-dimensional smooth complete variety is projective, so 3 is the smallest possible dimension for such an example. There are plenty of 2-dimensional complex manifolds that are not algebraic, such as Hopf surfaces (non Kรคhler) and non-algebraic tori (Kรคhler).
An effective cycle algebraically equivalent to 0
editIn a projective variety, a nonzero effective cycle has non-zero degree so cannot be algebraically equivalent to 0. In Hironaka's example the effective cycle consisting of the two exceptional curves is algebraically equivalent to 0.
A deformation of Kรคhler manifolds that is not a Kรคhler manifold
editIf one of the curves D in Hironaka's construction is allowed to vary in a family such that most curves of the family do not intersect D, then one obtains a family of manifolds such that most are projective but one is not. Over the complex numbers this gives a deformation of smooth Kรคhler (in fact projective) varieties that is not Kรคhler. This family is trivial in the smooth category, so in particular there are Kรคhler and non-Kรคhler smooth compact 3-dimensional complex manifolds that are diffeomorphic.
A smooth algebraic space that is not a scheme
editChoose C and D so that P has an automorphism ฯ of order 2 acting freely on P and exchanging C and D, and also exchanging c and d. Then the quotient of V by the action of ฯ is a smooth 3-dimensional algebraic space with an irreducible curve algebraically equivalent to 0. This means that the quotient is a smooth 3-dimensional algebraic space that is not a scheme.
A Moishezon manifold that is not an abstract variety
editIf the previous construction is done with complex manifolds rather than algebraic spaces, it gives an example of a smooth 3-dimensional compact Moishezon manifold that is not an abstract variety. A Moishezon manifold of dimension at most 2 is necessarily projective, so 3 is the minimum possible dimension for this example.
The quotient of a scheme by a free action of a finite group need not be a scheme
editThis is essentially the same as the previous two examples. The quotient does exist as a scheme if every orbit is contained in an affine open subscheme; the counterexample above shows that this technical condition cannot be dropped.
A finite subset of a variety need not be contained in an open affine subvariety
editFor quasi-projective varieties, it is obvious that any finite subset is contained in an open affine subvariety. This property fails for Hironaka's example: a two-points set consisting of a point in each of the exceptional curves is not contained in any open affine subvariety.
A variety with no Hilbert scheme
editFor Hironaka's variety V over the complex numbers with an automorphism of order 2 as above, the Hilbert functor HilbV/C of closed subschemes is not representable by a scheme, essentially because the quotient by the group of order 2 does not exist as a scheme (Nitsure 2005, p.112). In other words, this gives an example of a smooth complete variety whose Hilbert scheme does not exist. Grothendieck showed that the Hilbert scheme always exists for projective varieties.
Descent can fail for proper smooth morphisms of proper schemes
editPick a non-trivial Z/2Z torsor Bย โย A; for example in characteristic not 2 one could take A and B to be the affine line minus the origin with the map from B to A given by xย โย x2. Think of B as an open covering of U for the รฉtale topology. If V is a complete scheme with a fixed point free action of a group of orderย 2, then descent data for the map Vย รย Bย โย B are given by a suitable isomorphism from VรC to itself, where Cย =ย BรAB =ย Bย รย Z/2Z. Such an isomorphism is given by the action of Z/2Z on V and C. If this descent datum were effective then the fibers of the descent over U would give a quotient of V by the action of Z/2Z. So if this quotient does not exist as a scheme (as in the example above) then the descent data are ineffective. See Vistoliย (2005,โpage 103).
A scheme of finite type over a field such that not every line bundle comes from a divisor
editIf X is a scheme of finite type over a field there is a natural map from divisors to line bundles. If X is either projective or reduced then this map is surjective. Kleiman found an example of a non-reduced and non-projective X for which this map is not surjective as follows. Take Hironaka's example of a variety with two rational curves A and B such that A+B is numerically equivalent to 0. Then X is given by picking points a and b on A and B and introducing nilpotent elements at these points.
References
edit- Hironaka, Heisuke (1960), On the theory of birational blowing-up, Thesis, Harvard
{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Hironaka, Heisuke (1962), "An example of a non-Kรคhlerian complex-analytic deformation of Kรคhlerian complex structures.", Ann. of Math., 2, 75 (1): 190โ208, doi:10.2307/1970426, JSTORย 1970426, MRย 0139182
- Nitsure, Nitin (2005), "Construction of Hilbert and Quot schemes", Fundamental algebraic geometry, Math. Surveys Monogr., vol.ย 123, Providence, R.I.: Amer. Math. Soc., pp.ย 105โ137, arXiv:math/0504590, Bibcode:2005math......4590N, MRย 2223407
- Vistoli, Angelo (2005), "Grothendieck topologies, fibered categories and descent theory", Fundamental algebraic geometry, Math. Surveys Monogr., vol.ย 123, Providence, R.I.: Amer. Math. Soc., pp.ย 1โ104, arXiv:math/0412512, Bibcode:2004math.....12512V, MRย 2223406
External links
edit- Thiel (2007), Hironaka's example of a complete but non-projective variety (PDF)








