Minimal model program

Minimal model program

In algebraic geometry, the minimal model program is part of the birational classification of algebraic varieties. Its goal is to construct a birational model of any complex projective variety which is as simple as possible. The subject has its origins in the classical birational geometry of surfaces studied by the Italian school, and is currently an active research area within algebraic geometry.

Contents

Outline

The basic idea of the theory is to simplify the birational classification of varieties by finding, in each birational equivalence class, a variety which is "as simple as possible". The precise meaning of this phrase has evolved with the development of the subject; originally for surfaces, it meant finding a smooth variety X for which any birational morphism f: X \rightarrow X' is an isomorphism.

In the modern formulation, the goal of the theory is as follows. Suppose we are given a projective variety X, which for simplicity is assumed nonsingular. There are two cases:

  • If X has Kodaira dimension κ(X,KX) = − 1, we want to find a variety X^\prime birational to X, and a morphism f: X' \rightarrow Y to a projective variety Y such that dim Y< dimX', with the anticanonical class KF of a general fibre F being ample. Such a morphism is called a Fano fibre space.
  • If κ(X,KX) is at least 0, we want to find X' birational to X, with the canonical class K_{X^\prime} nef. In this case, X' is a minimal model for X.

The question of nonsingularity of the varieties X' and X appearing above is an important one. It seems natural to hope that if we start with smooth X, then we can always find a minimal model or Fano fibre space inside the category of smooth varieties. However, this is not true, and so it becomes necessary to consider singular varieties also. The singularities that appear are called terminal singularities.

Minimal models of surfaces

Every irreducible complex algebraic curve is birational to a unique smooth projective curve, so the theory for curves is trivial. The case of surfaces was first investigated by the geometers of the Italian school around 1900; the contraction theorem of Castelnuovo essentially describes the process of constructing a minimal model of any smooth surface. The theorem states that any nontrivial birational morphism f:XY must contract a −1-curve to a smooth point, and conversely any such curve can be smoothly contracted. Here a −1-curve is a smooth rational curve C with self-intersection C.C = −1. Any such curve must have K.C=−1 which shows that if the canonical class is nef then the surface has no −1-curves.

Castelnuovo's theorem implies that to construct a minimal model for a smooth surface, we simply contract all the −1-curves on the surface, and the resulting variety Y is either a (unique) minimal model with K nef, or a ruled surface (which is the same as a 2-dimensional Fano fiber space, and is either a projective plane or a ruled surface over a curve). In the second case, the ruled surface birational to X is not unique, though there is a unique one isomorphic to the product of the projective line and a curve.

Higher-dimensional minimal models

In dimensions greater than 2, the theory becomes far more involved. In particular, there exist smooth varieties X which are not birational to any smooth variety X' with nef canonical class. The major conceptual advance of the 1970s and early 1980s was that the construction of minimal models is still feasible, provided one is careful about the types of singularities which occur. (For example, we want to decide if KX' is nef, so intersection numbers K_{X'} \cdot C must be defined. Hence, at the very least, our varieties must have nKX' Cartier for some positive integer n.)

The first key result is the Cone theorem of Mori, describing the structure of the cone of curves of X. Briefly, the theorem shows that starting with X, one can inductively construct a sequence of varieties Xi, each of which is 'closer' than the previous one to having K_{X_i} nef. However, the process may encounter difficulties: at some point the variety Xi may become 'too singular'. The conjectural solution to this problem is the flip, a kind of codimension-2 surgery operation on Xi. It is not clear that the required flips exist, nor that they always terminate (that is, that one reaches a minimal model X' in finitely many steps.) Mori (1988) showed that flips exist in the 3-dimensional case; much recent work has focused on existence and termination problems in higher dimensions.

References


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