Zero cycles on a singular surface. I. Appendix: Chow groups of rational surfaces with rational double points.

1985 ◽  
Vol 1985 (359) ◽  
pp. 90-105
Author(s):  
H. F. Baker

To a non-singular algebraic surface in space of five dimensions there can generally (the Veronese surface, of order 4, and cones are exceptional) be drawn, from an arbitrary point, a finite number of chords. If such a surface be projected from a point into space of four dimensions, there will, therefore, in general, be a certain number of points upon the resulting surface, at which two sheets of this surface, with distinct tangent planes, have an isolated common point. Such points have been called improper double points. We consider an algebraic surface ψ, in space of four dimensions [4], with no other multiple points than such double points, which we shall call accidental double points. The chords of the surface ψ, drawn from an arbitrary point O of the space [4], form a surface, or conical sheet, of which a general generator meets the surface in two points. The locus of these points is a curve which we shall call the chord curve. This curve has an actual double point at each of the accidental double points of ψ There will also, generally, be a certain number of points of the surface which are points of contact of tangent planes of the surface passing through O (and therefore also points of contact of tangent lines through O, these tangent lines being generally tangent lines of the chord curve).


It is shown that the non-singular model of an algebraic surface, lying in complex projective 3-space and possessing only ordinary double points, is differentiably homeomorphic to any non-singular surface of the same degree. This result does not hold in any other dimension.


1981 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 421-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Louis Colliot-Th�l�ne ◽  
Jean-Jacques Sansuc

Author(s):  
Claire Voisin

This book provides an introduction to algebraic cycles on complex algebraic varieties, to the major conjectures relating them to cohomology, and even more precisely to Hodge structures on cohomology. The book is intended for both students and researchers, and not only presents a survey of the geometric methods developed in the last thirty years to understand the famous Bloch-Beilinson conjectures, but also examines recent work by the author. It focuses on two central objects: the diagonal of a variety—and the partial Bloch-Srinivas type decompositions it may have depending on the size of Chow groups—as well as its small diagonal, which is the right object to consider in order to understand the ring structure on Chow groups and cohomology. An exploration of a sampling of recent works by the author looks at the relation, conjectured in general by Bloch and Beilinson, between the coniveau of general complete intersections and their Chow groups and a very particular property satisfied by the Chow ring of K3 surfaces and conjecturally by hyper-Kähler manifolds. In particular, the book delves into arguments originating in Nori's work that have been further developed by others.


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