The Kawamata-Morrison cone conjecture holds for Q-factorial terminal projective primitive symplectic varieties with b2 > 5 over characteristic zero fields, with an application to relative movable and nef cone conjectures for fibrations.
Finiteness of pointed families of symplectic varieties: a geometric Shafarevich conjecture
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We investigate in this paper the so-called pointed Shafarevich problem for families of primitive symplectic varieties. More precisely, for any fixed pointed curve $(B, 0)$ and any fixed primitive symplectic variety $X$, among all locally trivial families of $\mathbb{Q}$-factorial and terminal primitive symplectic varieties over $B$ whose fiber over $0$ is isomorphic to $X$, we show that there are only finitely many isomorphism classes of generic fibers. Moreover, assuming semi-ampleness of isotropic nef divisors, which holds true for all hyper-K\"ahler manifolds of known deformation types, we show that there are only finitely many such projective families up to isomorphism. These results are optimal since we can construct infinitely many pairwise non-isomorphic (not necessarily projective) families of smooth hyper-K\"ahler varieties over some pointed curve $(B, 0)$ such that they are all isomorphic over the punctured curve $B\backslash \{0\}$ and have isomorphic fibers over the base point $0$.
fields
math.AG 1years
2025 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
The Cone Conjecture for Primitive Symplectic Varieties over a Field of Characteristic Zero and an Application
The Kawamata-Morrison cone conjecture holds for Q-factorial terminal projective primitive symplectic varieties with b2 > 5 over characteristic zero fields, with an application to relative movable and nef cone conjectures for fibrations.