- Castelnuovo–Mumford regularity
-
In algebraic geometry, the Castelnuovo–Mumford regularity of a coherent sheaf F over projective space Pn is the smallest integer r such that it is r-regular, meaning that
whenever i > 0. The regularity of a subscheme is defined to be the regularity of its sheaf of ideals. The regularity controls when the Hilbert function of the sheaf becomes a polynomial; more precisely dim H0(Pn, F(m)) is a polynomial in m when m is at least the regularity. The concept of r-regularity was introduced by Mumford (1966, lecture 14), who attributed the following results to Guido Castelnuovo:
- An r-regular sheaf is s-regular for any s ≥ r.
- If a coherent sheaf is r-regular then F(r) is generated by its global sections.
References
- Eisenbud, David (2005), The geometry of syzygies, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 229, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/b137572, ISBN 978-0-387-22215-8, MR2103875
- Mumford, David (1966), Lectures on Curves on an Algebraic Surface, Annals of Mathematics Studies, 59, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-07993-6, MR0209285
Categories:
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.