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Lefschetz theorem on (1,1)-classes

In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, the Lefschetz theorem on (1,1)-classes, named after Solomon Lefschetz, is a classical statement relating holomorphic line bundles on a compact Kähler manifold to classes in its integral cohomology. It is the only case of the Hodge conjecture which has been proved for all Kähler manifolds.

Statement of the theorem

Let X be a compact Kähler manifold. The first Chern class c<sub>1</sub> gives a map from holomorphic line bundles to . By Hodge theory, the de Rham cohomology group H<sup>2</sup>(X, C) decomposes as a direct sum , and it can be proven that the image of c<sub>1</sub> lies in H<sup>1,1</sup>(X). The theorem says that the map to is surjective.

In the special case where X is a projective variety, holomorphic line bundles are in bijection with linear equivalences class of divisors, and given a divisor D on X with associated line bundle O(D), the class c<sub>1</sub>(O(D)) is Poincaré dual to the homology class given by D. Thus, this establishes the usual formulation of the Hodge conjecture for divisors in projective varieties.

Proof using normal functions

Lefschetz's original proof worked on projective surfaces and used normal functions, which were introduced by Poincaré. Suppose that C<sub>t</sub> is a pencil of curves on X. Each of these curves has a Jacobian variety JC<sub>t</sub> (if a curve is singular, there is an appropriate generalized Jacobian variety). These can be assembled into a family , the Jacobian of the pencil, which comes with a projection map π to the base T of the pencil. A normal function is a (holomorphic) section of π.

Fix an embedding of X in P<sup>N</sup>, and choose a pencil of curves C<sub>t</sub> on X. For a fixed curve Γ on X, the intersection of Γ and C<sub>t</sub> is a divisor on C<sub>t</sub>, where d is the degree of X. Fix a base point p<sub>0</sub> of the pencil. Then the divisor is a divisor of degree zero, and consequently it determines a class ν<sub>Γ</sub>(t) in the Jacobian JC<sub>t</sub> for all t. The map from t to ν<sub>Γ</sub>(t) is a normal function.

Henri Poincaré proved that for a general pencil of curves, all normal functions arose as ν<sub>Γ</sub>(t) for some choice of Γ. Lefschetz proved that any normal function determined a class in H<sup>2</sup>(X, Z) and that the class of ν<sub>Γ</sub> is the fundamental class of Γ. Furthermore, he proved that a class in H<sup>2</sup>(X, Z) is the class of a normal function if and only if it lies in H<sup>1,1</sup>. Together with Poincaré's existence theorem, this proves the theorem on (1,1)-classes.

Proof using sheaf cohomology

Because X is a complex manifold, it admits an exponential sheaf sequence

Taking sheaf cohomology of this exact sequence gives maps

The group of line bundles on X is isomorphic to . The first Chern class map is c<sub>1</sub> by definition, so it suffices to show that is zero on .

Because X is Kähler, Hodge theory implies that . However, factors through the map from H<sup>2</sup>(X, Z) to H<sup>2</sup>(X, C), and on H<sup>2</sup>(X, C), is the restriction of the projection onto H<sup>0,2</sup>(X). It follows that it is zero on , and consequently that the cycle class map is surjective.

References

Bibliography

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