Intersections and the Bézout Range for Abelian Varieties
Gregorio Baldi (IMJ and IAS)
Abstract: Given subvarieties X,Y of a complex algebraic variety S of complementary dimension, must they intersect? When S is projective space, this is a consequence of the classical Bézout theorem, and an analogue for simple abelian varieties was established by Barth in 1968. Moreover, the moving lemma suggests that, after suitable translations, one may arrange for intersections of the expected dimension. In this talk, we describe variants for simple abelian varieties in the spirit of the completed Zilber--Pink philosophy. When X and Y have complementary dimension, we show that the intersections X∩[n]Y are zero-dimensional for all but finitely many integers n, and that these intersections collectively give rise to an analytically dense subset of X as n varies. We moreover control those n for which X∩[n]Y has a positive dimensional component uniformly in X,Y and A. When dimX+dimY < dim A, we show that X∩[n]Y=∅ for a set of integers n of asymptotic density one, except in the presence of intersections at torsion points.
number theory
Audience: researchers in the topic
( paper )
| Organizers: | Sol Friedberg*, Benjamin Howard, Dubi Kelmer, Spencer Leslie, Keerthi Madapusi Pera, Bjorn Poonen*, Andrew Sutherland*, Wei Zhang* |
| *contact for this listing |
