Misplaced Pages

Tropical compactification

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Mathematical concept

In algebraic geometry, a tropical compactification is a compactification (projective completion) of a subvariety of an algebraic torus, introduced by Jenia Tevelev. Given an algebraic torus and a connected closed subvariety of that torus, a compactification of the subvariety is defined as a closure of it in a toric variety of the original torus. The concept of a tropical compactification arises when trying to make compactifications as "nice" as possible. For a torus T {\displaystyle T} and a toric variety P {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} } , the compactification X ¯ {\displaystyle {\bar {X}}} is tropical when the map

Φ : T × X ¯ P ,   ( t , x ) t x {\displaystyle \Phi :T\times {\bar {X}}\to \mathbb {P} ,\ (t,x)\to tx}

is faithfully flat and X ¯ {\displaystyle {\bar {X}}} is proper.

See also

References

From left: Hannah Markwig, Aaron Bertram, and Renzo Cavalieri, 2012 at the MFO
  1. Tevelev, Jenia (2007-08-07). "Compactifications of subvarieties of tori". American Journal of Mathematics. 129 (4): 1087–1104. arXiv:math/0412329. doi:10.1353/ajm.2007.0029. ISSN 1080-6377.
  2. Brugallé, Erwan; Shaw, Kristin (2014). "A Bit of Tropical Geometry". The American Mathematical Monthly. 121 (7): 563–589. arXiv:1311.2360. doi:10.4169/amer.math.monthly.121.07.563. JSTOR 10.4169/amer.math.monthly.121.07.563.


Stub icon

This algebra-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: