arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1307.6491 [math.AG]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Milnor and Tjurina numbers for smoothings of surface singularities

Jonathan Wahl

Published 2013-07-24, updated 2016-03-25Version 2

For an isolated hypersurface singularity $f=0$, the Milnor number $\mu$ is greater than or equal to the Tjurina number $\tau$ (the dimension of the base of the semi-universal deformation), with equality if $f$ is quasi-homogeneous. K. Saito proved the converse. The same result is true for complete intersections, but is much harder. For a Gorenstein surface singularity $(V,0)$, the difference $\mu - \tau$ can be defined whether or not $V$ is smoothable; it was proved in [23] that it is non-negative, and equal to 0 iff $(V,0)$ is quasi-homogeneous. We conjecture a similar result for non-Gorenstein surface singularities. Here, $\mu - \tau$ must be modified so that it is independent of any smoothing. This expression, involving cohomology of exterior powers of the bundle of logarithmic derivations on the minimal good resolution, is conjecturally non-negative, and equal to 0 iff one has quasi-homogeneity. We prove the "if" part; identify special cases where the conjecture is particularly interesting; verify it in some non-trivial cases; and prove it for a $\Q$Gorenstein smoothing when the index one cover is a hypersurface. This conjecture is of interest regarding the classification of surface singularities with rational homology disk smoothings, as in [1], [18], [24].

Comments: 19 pages, for Eduard Looijenga's 65th birthday, additional references to work of Okuma and K. Watanabe
Journal: Algebraic Geometry 2 (3) (2015) 315-331
Categories: math.AG
Subjects: 14J17, 14B07, 32S30, 32S25
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:math/0012198 [math.AG] (Published 2000-12-20)
Matroids, motives and conjecture of Kontsevich
arXiv:1005.3982 [math.AG] (Published 2010-05-21)
Curves on threefolds and a conjecture of Griffiths-Harris
arXiv:1108.4403 [math.AG] (Published 2011-08-22, updated 2011-09-15)
Another proof of the $n!$ conjecture