Extremal singularities in prime characteristic

Karen Smith (University of Michigan)

13-May-2021, 20:30-22:00 (3 years ago)

Abstract: What is the most singular possible singularity? What can we say about it's geometric and algebraic properties? This seemingly naive question has a sensible answer in characteristic p. The "F-pure threshold," which is an analog of the log canonical threshold, can be used to "measure" how bad a singularity is. The F-pure threshold is a numerical invariant of a point on (say) a hypersurface---a positive rational number that is 1 at any smooth point (or more generally, any F-pure point) but less than one in general, with "more singular" points having smaller F-pure thresholds. We explain a recently proved lower bound on the F-pure threshold in terms of the multiplicity of the singularity. We also show that there is a nice class of hypersurfaces--which we call "Extremal hypersurfaces"---for which this bound is achieved. These have very nice (extreme!) geometric properties. For example, the affine cone over a non Frobenius split cubic surface of characteristic two is one example of an "extremal singularity". Geometrically, these are the only cubic surfaces with the property that *every* triple of coplanar lines on the surface meets in a single point (rather than a "triangle" as expected)--a very extreme property indeed.

commutative algebra

Audience: researchers in the topic


Fellowship of the Ring

Series comments: Description: National Commutative Algebra Seminar

You have to register to attend the seminar; the registration link is on the webpage. But you only have to register once. Once you register for a seminar, your registration will be carried over (in theory!) to future seminars.

Organizers: Srikanth B. Iyengar*, Karl E. Schwede
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