scholarly journals Generic rank of Betti map and unlikely intersections

2020 ◽  
Vol 156 (12) ◽  
pp. 2469-2509
Author(s):  
Ziyang Gao

Let $\mathcal {A} \rightarrow S$ be an abelian scheme over an irreducible variety over $\mathbb {C}$ of relative dimension $g$. For any simply-connected subset $\Delta$ of $S^{\mathrm {an}}$ one can define the Betti map from $\mathcal {A}_{\Delta }$ to $\mathbb {T}^{2g}$, the real torus of dimension $2g$, by identifying each closed fiber of $\mathcal {A}_{\Delta } \rightarrow \Delta$ with $\mathbb {T}^{2g}$ via the Betti homology. Computing the generic rank of the Betti map restricted to a subvariety $X$ of $\mathcal {A}$ is useful to study Diophantine problems, e.g. proving the geometric Bogomolov conjecture over char $0$ and studying the relative Manin–Mumford conjecture. In this paper we give a geometric criterion to detect this rank. As an application we show that it is maximal after taking a large fibered power (if $X$ satisfies some conditions); it is an important step to prove the bound for the number of rational points on curves (Dimitrov et al., Uniformity in Mordell–Lang for Curves, Preprint (2020), arXiv:2001.10276). Another application is to answer a question of André, Corvaja and Zannier and improve a result of Voisin. We also systematically study its link with the relative Manin–Mumford conjecture, reducing the latter to a simpler conjecture. Our tools are functional transcendence and unlikely intersections for mixed Shimura varieties.

2008 ◽  
Vol 58 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ľ. Holá ◽  
Tanvi Jain ◽  
R. McCoy

AbstractA set-valued mapping F from a topological space X to a topological space Y is called a cusco map if F is upper semicontinuous and F(x) is a nonempty, compact and connected subset of Y for each x ∈ X. We denote by L(X), the space of all subsets F of X × ℝ such that F is the graph of a cusco map from the space X to the real line ℝ. In this paper, we study topological properties of L(X) endowed with the Vietoris topology.


Author(s):  
Roy O. Davies

Besicovitch's construction(1) of a set of measure zerot containing an infinite straight line in every direction was subsequently adapted (2, 3, 4) to provide the following answer to Kakeya's problem (5): a unit segment can be continuously turned round, so as to return to its original position with the ends reversed, inside an arbitrarily small area. The last word on Kakeya's problem itself seems to be F. Cunningham Jr.'s remarkable result(6)‡ that this can be done inside a simply connected subset of arbitrarily small measure of a unit circle.


2021 ◽  
pp. 95-102
Author(s):  
Xiaoyi Cui ◽  
Boldizsár Kalmár ◽  
Patrick Orson ◽  
Nathan Sunukjian

‘The Whitehead Decomposition’ introduces this historically significant decomposition. Not only is the quotient of the 3-sphere by the Whitehead decomposition not homeomorphic to the 3-sphere, it is not even a manifold. In order to detect this curious fact, the notion of a noncompact space being simply connected at infinity is introduced. The chapter also describes the Whitehead manifold, which is a contractible 3-manifold not homeomorphic to Euclidean space. While the Whitehead decomposition does not shrink, its product with the real line does, as is proved in this chapter; in other words, the quotient of the 3-sphere by the Whitehead decomposition is a manifold factor. The proof of the disc embedding theorem utilizes Bing–Whitehead decompositions, which may be understood to be a mix between the Whitehead decomposition and the Bing decomposition from a previous chapter. In a subsequent chapter, precisely when Bing–Whitehead decompositions shrink is explained.


2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
James Paul Gee

In his entertaining 1986 book, The Real Coke, the Real Story, Thomas Oliver tells the story of the now infamous “New Coke”, a story retold in Malcolm Gladwell’s (2005) best-seller Blink. In the early 1980s, Pepsi began running commercials in which people took a sip from two glasses, not knowing which was Coke and which Pepsi. The majority preferred Pepsi. The Coca-Cola Company replicated these blind taste-tests and found the same result. Losing market share, Coke—long the dominant brand—changed its old formula and came out with “New Coke”, a soda made to a new formula, one that in a new round of blind taste-tests came out above Pepsi. But New Coke was a disaster.Consumers hated it. Coke not only returned to its old formula, but Pepsi never did overtake Coke, which remains today the dominant brand world-wide.


1952 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 571-577
Author(s):  
A. C. Allen

Any harmonic function which is defined and positive in the half-plane η > 0 may be expressed bywhere C is a non-negative number, and G(x) is a bounded non-decreasing function. For a simple proof see Loomis and Widder (2). Let us writewhere w(z) is a regular function of z in η > 0, and satisfies the following conditions: (i) w(z) is real and continuous at all points of the open interval (a, b) of the real axis [the interval may be unbounded]; (ii) there exists a simply connected domain Δ, lying in the half-plane η > 0, whose frontier contains the interval (a, b) of the real axis and which is mapped ‘simply’ on the half-plane υ > 0 by the conformal transformation w = w(z).


Author(s):  
Michael Cuntz ◽  
István Heckenberger

AbstractUsing previous results concerning the rank two and rank three cases, all connected simply connected Cartan schemes for which the real roots form a finite irreducible root system of arbitrary rank are determined. As a consequence one obtains the list of all crystallographic arrangements, a large subclass of the class of simplicial hyperplane arrangements. Supposing that the rank is at least three, the classification yields Cartan schemes of type


1971 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 43-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.G. Eke

Let S be a simply connected domain in the w + u + iv plane and let ∂S denote its boundary which we assume passes through w= ∞. Suppose that the segment L= {u ≧ u0; v = 0} of the real axis lies in S and that w∞ is the point of ∂ S accessible along L. Let z = z(w) = x(w) + iy(w) map S in a (1 — 1) conformal way onto ∑ = {z = x + iy: — ∞ < x < + ∞ } so that . The inverse map is w = w(z) = u(z) + iv(z). S is said to possess a finite angular derivative at w∞ if z(w) — w approaches a finite limit (called the angular derivative) as w→w∞ in certain substrips of S.


1995 ◽  
Vol 06 (03) ◽  
pp. 439-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
TAKAHIRO SUDO ◽  
HIROSHI TAKAI

The stable rank of the C*-algebras of simply connected nilpotent Lie groups is determined by the dimension of the fixed point subspaces of the real adjoint spaces of the Lie algebras under the coadjoint actions, which is a generalization of the result obtained by A. J-L. Sheu. This equality is no longer affirmative in the case of non-nilpotent Lie groups.


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