In algebraic geometry, the tautological ring is the subring of the Chow ring of the moduli space of curves generated by tautological classes. These are classes obtained from 1 by pushforward along various morphisms described below. The tautological cohomology ring is the image of the tautological ring under the cycle map (from the Chow ring to the cohomology ring).

Definition edit

Let   be the moduli stack of stable marked curves  , such that

  • C is a complex curve of arithmetic genus g whose only singularities are nodes,
  • the n points x1, ..., xn are distinct smooth points of C,
  • the marked curve is stable, namely its automorphism group (leaving marked points invariant) is finite.

The last condition requires   in other words (g,n) is not among (0,0), (0,1), (0,2), (1,0). The stack   then has dimension  . Besides permutations of the marked points, the following morphisms between these moduli stacks play an important role in defining tautological classes:

  • Forgetful maps   which act by removing a given point xk from the set of marked points, then restabilizing the marked curved if it is not stable anymore[clarification needed].
  • Gluing maps   that identify the k-th marked point of a curve to the l-th marked point of the other. Another set of gluing maps is   that identify the k-th and l-th marked points, thus increasing the genus by creating a closed loop.

The tautological rings   are simultaneously defined as the smallest subrings of the Chow rings closed under pushforward by forgetful and gluing maps.[1]

The tautological cohomology ring   is the image of   under the cycle map. As of 2016, it is not known whether the tautological and tautological cohomology rings are isomorphic.

Generating set edit

For   we define the class   as follows. Let   be the pushforward of 1 along the gluing map   which identifies the marked point xk of the first curve to one of the three marked points yi on the sphere (the latter choice is unimportant thanks to automorphisms). For definiteness order the resulting points as x1, ..., xk−1, y1, y2, xk+1, ..., xn. Then   is defined as the pushforward of   along the forgetful map that forgets the point y2. This class coincides with the first Chern class of a certain line bundle.[1]

For   we also define   be the pushforward of   along the forgetful map   that forgets the k-th point. This is independent of k (simply permute points).

Theorem.   is additively generated by pushforwards along (any number of) gluing maps of monomials in   and   classes.

These pushforwards of monomials (hereafter called basic classes) do not form a basis. The set of relations is not fully known.

Theorem. The tautological rings are invariant under pullback along gluing and forgetful maps. There exist universal combinatorial formulae expressing pushforwards, pullbacks, and products of basic classes as linear combinations of basic classes.

Faber conjectures edit

The tautological ring   on the moduli space of smooth n-pointed genus g curves simply consists of restrictions of classes in  . We omit n when it is zero (when there is no marked point).

In the case   of curves with no marked point, Mumford conjectured, and Madsen and Weiss proved, that for any   the map   is an isomorphism in degree d for large enough g. In this case all classes are tautological.

Conjecture (Faber). (1) Large-degree tautological rings vanish:   for   (2)   and there is an explicit combinatorial formula for this isomorphism. (3) The product (coming from the Chow ring) of classes defines a perfect pairing  

Although   trivially vanishes for   because of the dimension of  , the conjectured bound is much lower. The conjecture would completely determine the structure of the ring: a polynomial in the   of cohomological degree d vanishes if and only if its pairing with all polynomials of cohomological degree   vanishes.

Parts (1) and (2) of the conjecture were proven. Part (3), also called the Gorenstein conjecture, was only checked for  . For   and higher genus, several methods of constructing relations between   classes find the same set of relations which suggest that the dimensions of   and   are different. If the set of relations found by these methods is complete then the Gorenstein conjecture is wrong. Besides Faber's original non-systematic computer search based on classical maps between vector bundles over  , the d-th fiber power of the universal curve  , the following methods have been used to find relations:

  • Virtual classes of the moduli space of stable quotients (over  ) by Pandharipande and Pixton.[2]
  • Witten's r-spin class and Givental-Telemann's classification of cohomological field theories, used by Pandharipande, Pixton, Zvonkine.[3]
  • Geometry of the universal Jacobian over  , by Yin.
  • Powers of theta-divisor on the universal abelian variety, by Grushevsky and Zakharov.[4]

These four methods are proven to give the same set of relations.

Similar conjectures were formulated for moduli spaces   of stable curves and   of compact-type stable curves. However, Petersen-Tommasi[5] proved that   and   fail to obey the (analogous) Gorenstein conjecture. On the other hand, Tavakol[6] proved that for genus 2 the moduli space of rational-tails stable curves   obeys the Gorenstein condition for every n.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Faber, C.; Pandharipande, R. (2011). "Tautological and non-tautological cohomology of the moduli space of curves". arXiv:1101.5489 [math.AG].
  2. ^ Pandharipande, R.; Pixton, A. (2013). "Relations in the tautological ring of the moduli space of curves". arXiv:1301.4561 [math.AG].
  3. ^ Pandharipande, R.; Pixton, A.; Zvonkine, D. (2016). "Tautological relations via r-spin structures". arXiv:1607.00978 [math.AG].
  4. ^ Grushevsky, Samuel; Zakharov, Dmitry (2012). "The zero section of the universal semiabelian variety, and the double ramification cycle". Duke Mathematical Journal. 163 (5): 953–982. arXiv:1206.3534. doi:10.1215/00127094-26444575.
  5. ^ Petersen, Dan; Tommasi, Orsola (2012). "The Gorenstein conjecture fails for the tautological ring of $\mathcal{\bar M}_{2,n}$". Inventiones mathematicae. 196 (2014): 139. arXiv:1210.5761. Bibcode:2014InMat.196..139P. doi:10.1007/s00222-013-0466-z.
  6. ^ Tavakol, Mehdi (2011). "The tautological ring of the moduli space M_{2,n}^rt". arXiv:1101.5242 [math.AG].