This is the first comprehensive basic monograph on mixed Hodge structures. Starting with a summary of classic Hodge theory from a modern vantage point the book goes on to explain Deligne's mixed Hodge theory. Here proofs are given using cubical schemes rather than simplicial schemes. Next come Hain'
Mixed Hodge Structures
β Scribed by Chris A.M. Peters, Joseph H.M. Steenbrink (auth.)
- Book ID
- 127452725
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 4 MB
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
- City
- Berlin
- ISBN
- 3540770178
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The text of this book has its origins more than twenty- ve years ago. In the seminar of the Dutch Singularity Theory project in 1982 and 1983, the second-named author gave a series of lectures on Mixed Hodge Structures and Singularities, accompanied by a set of hand-written notes. The publication of these notes was prevented by a revolution in the subject due to Morihiko Saito: the introduction of the theory of Mixed Hodge Modules around 1985. Understanding this theory was at the same time of great importance and very hard, due to the fact that it uni es many di erent theories which are quite complicated themselves: algebraic D-modules and perverse sheaves. The present book intends to provide a comprehensive text about Mixed Hodge Theory with a view towards Mixed Hodge Modules. The approach to Hodge theory for singular spaces is due to Navarro and his collaborators, whose results provide stronger vanishing results than Deligneβs original theory. Navarro and Guill en also lled a gap in the proof that the weight ltration on the nearby cohomology is the right one. In that sense the present book corrects and completes the second-named authorβs thesis.
β¦ Subjects
Mathematical Methods in Physics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book is both an introduction to, and a survey of, some topics of singularity theory; in particular the studying singularities by means of differential forms. Using the language of algebraic geometry, the author strikes a balance between the traditional approach to the subject, and the more abst