This book establishes the moduli theory of stable varieties, giving the optimal approach to understanding families of varieties of general type. Starting from the Deligne-Mumford theory of the moduli of curves and using Mori's program as a main tool, the book develops the techniques necessary for a theory in all dimensions. The main results give all the expected general properties, including a projective coarse moduli space. A wealth of previously unpublished material is also featured, including Chapter 5 on numerical flatness criteria, Chapter 7 on K-flatness, and Chapter 9 on hulls and husks.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'This book dismantles the final, most daunting barriers to learning about moduli of higher dimensional varieties, from the point of view of the Minimal Model Program. The first chapter draws the reader in with a compelling history; a discussion of the main ideas; a visitor's trail through the subject, complete with guardrails around the most dangerous traps; and a rundown of the issues that one must overcome. The text that follows is the outcome of Kollar's monumental three-decades-long effort, with the final stones laid just in the last few years.' Dan Abramovich, Brown University 'This is a fantastic book from Janos Kollar, one of the godfathers of the compact moduli theory of higher dimensional varieties. The book contains the definition of the moduli functor, the prerequisites required for the definition, and also the proof of the existence of the projective coarse moduli space. This is a stunning achievement, completing the story of 35 years of research. I expect this to become the main reference book, and also the principal place to learn about the theory for graduate students and others interested.' Zsolt Patakfalvi, EPFL 'This excellent book provides a wealth of examples and technical details for those studying birational geometry and moduli spaces. It completely addresses several state-of-the-art topics in the field, including different stability notions, K-flatness, and subtleties in defining families of stable pairs over an arbitrary base. It will be an essential resource for both those first learning the subject and experts as it moves through history and examples before settling many of the (previously unknown) technicalities needed to define the correct moduli functor.' Kristin DeVleming, University of Massachusetts Amherst 'Written by a leader of the field, the book sets a milestone in the moduli theory of high-dimensional pairs. It presents the evolution of the topic, as well as Kollar's distinct way of thinking about it.' Chenyang Xu, MathSciNet
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Fadenheftung
Gewebe-Einband
Illustrationen
Worked examples or Exercises
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 158 mm
Dicke: 35 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-009-34610-8 (9781009346108)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Janos Kollar is Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University. He has received the Cole Prize (2006), the Nemmers Prize (2016), and the Shaw Prize (2017). He is the author of more than 200 articles and ten books, mostly on algebraic geometry.
Autor*in
Princeton University, New Jersey
Introduction; Notation; 1. History of moduli problems; 2. One-parameter families; 3. Families of stable varieties; 4. Stable pairs over reduced base schemes; 5. Numerical flatness and stability criteria; 6. Moduli problems with flat divisorial part; 7. Cayley flatness; 8. Moduli of stable pairs; 9. Hulls and husks; 10. Ancillary results; 11. Minimal models and their singularities; References; Index.