Moduli of abelian varieties

Summary

Abelian varieties are a natural generalization of elliptic curves, including algebraic tori in higher dimensions. Just as elliptic curves have a natural moduli space over characteristic 0 constructed as a quotient of the upper-half plane by the action of ,[1] there is an analogous construction for abelian varieties using the Siegel upper half-space and the symplectic group .[2]

Constructions over characteristic 0 edit

Principally polarized Abelian varieties edit

Recall that the Siegel upper-half plane is given by[3]

 

which is an open subset in the   symmetric matrices (since   is an open subset of  , and   is continuous). Notice if   this gives   matrices with positive imaginary part, hence this set is a generalization of the upper half plane. Then any point   gives a complex torus

 

with a principal polarization   from the matrix  [2]page 34. It turns out all principally polarized Abelian varieties arise this way, giving   the structure of a parameter space for all principally polarized Abelian varieties. But, there exists an equivalence where

  for  

hence the moduli space of principally polarized abelian varieties is constructed from the stack quotient

 

which gives a Deligne-Mumford stack over  . If this is instead given by a GIT quotient, then it gives the coarse moduli space  .

Principally polarized Abelian varieties with level n-structure edit

In many cases, it is easier to work with the moduli space of principally polarized Abelian varieties with level n-structure because it creates a rigidification of the moduli problem which gives a moduli functor instead of a moduli stack.[4][5] This means the functor is representable by an algebraic manifold, such as a variety or scheme, instead of a stack. A level n-structure is given by a fixed basis of

 

where   is the lattice  . Fixing such a basis removes the automorphisms of an abelian variety at a point in the moduli space, hence there exists a bona-fide algebraic manifold without a stabilizer structure. Denote

 

and define

 

as a quotient variety.

References edit

  1. ^ Hain, Richard (2014-03-25). "Lectures on Moduli Spaces of Elliptic Curves". arXiv:0812.1803 [math.AG].
  2. ^ a b Arapura, Donu. "Abelian Varieties and Moduli" (PDF).
  3. ^ Birkenhake, Christina; Lange, Herbert (2004). Complex Abelian Varieties. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften (2 ed.). Berlin Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. pp. 210–241. ISBN 978-3-540-20488-6.
  4. ^ Mumford, David (1983), Artin, Michael; Tate, John (eds.), "Towards an Enumerative Geometry of the Moduli Space of Curves", Arithmetic and Geometry: Papers Dedicated to I.R. Shafarevich on the Occasion of His Sixtieth Birthday. Volume II: Geometry, Progress in Mathematics, Birkhäuser, pp. 271–328, doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-9286-7_12, ISBN 978-1-4757-9286-7
  5. ^ Level n-structures are used to construct an intersection theory of Deligne–Mumford stacks

See also edit