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Rational singularities of nested Hilbert schemes

Ritvik Ramkumar, Alessio Sammartano

Abstract

The Hilbert scheme of points $\mathrm{Hilb}^n(S)$ of a smooth surface $S$ is a well-studied parameter space, lying at the interface of algebraic geometry, commutative algebra, representation theory, combinatorics, and mathematical physics. The foundational result is a classical theorem of Fogarty, stating that $\mathrm{Hilb}^n(S)$ is a smooth variety of dimension $2n$. In recent years there has been growing interest in a natural generalization of $\mathrm{Hilb}^n(S)$, the nested Hilbert scheme $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n_1,n_2)}(S)$, which parametrizes nested pairs of zero-dimensional subschemes $Z_1 \supseteq Z_2$ of $S$ with $\mathrm{deg} (Z_i)=n_i$. In contrast to Fogarty's theorem, $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n_1,n_2)}(S)$ is almost always singular, and very little is known about its singularities. In this paper we aim to advance the knowledge of the geometry of these nested Hilbert schemes. Work by Fogarty in the 70's shows that $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n,1)}(S)$ is a normal Cohen-Macaulay variety, and Song more recently proved that it has rational singularities. In our main result, we prove that the nested Hilbert scheme $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n,2)}(S)$ has rational singularities. We employ an array of tools from commutative algebra to prove this theorem. Using Gröbner bases, we establish a connection between $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n,2)}(S)$ and a certain variety of matrices with an action of the general linear group. This variety of matrices plays a central role in our work, and we analyze it by various algebraic techniques, including square-free Gröbner degenerations, the Stanley-Reisner correspondence, and the Kempf-Lascoux-Weyman technique of calculating syzygies. Along the way, we also obtain results on classes of irreducible and reducible nested Hilbert schemes, dimension of singular loci, and $F$-singularities in positive characteristic.

Rational singularities of nested Hilbert schemes

Abstract

The Hilbert scheme of points of a smooth surface is a well-studied parameter space, lying at the interface of algebraic geometry, commutative algebra, representation theory, combinatorics, and mathematical physics. The foundational result is a classical theorem of Fogarty, stating that is a smooth variety of dimension . In recent years there has been growing interest in a natural generalization of , the nested Hilbert scheme , which parametrizes nested pairs of zero-dimensional subschemes of with . In contrast to Fogarty's theorem, is almost always singular, and very little is known about its singularities. In this paper we aim to advance the knowledge of the geometry of these nested Hilbert schemes. Work by Fogarty in the 70's shows that is a normal Cohen-Macaulay variety, and Song more recently proved that it has rational singularities. In our main result, we prove that the nested Hilbert scheme has rational singularities. We employ an array of tools from commutative algebra to prove this theorem. Using Gröbner bases, we establish a connection between and a certain variety of matrices with an action of the general linear group. This variety of matrices plays a central role in our work, and we analyze it by various algebraic techniques, including square-free Gröbner degenerations, the Stanley-Reisner correspondence, and the Kempf-Lascoux-Weyman technique of calculating syzygies. Along the way, we also obtain results on classes of irreducible and reducible nested Hilbert schemes, dimension of singular loci, and -singularities in positive characteristic.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 16 sections, 53 theorems, 125 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

Let $S$ be a smooth, connected surface over a field ${\Bbbk}$ of characteristic 0. The nested Hilbert scheme $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n,2)}(S)$ is an irreducible $2n$-fold, non-singular in codimension 3, with rational singularities. In particular, $\mathrm{Hilb}^{(n,2)}(S)$ is normal and Cohen-Macaulay.

Theorems & Definitions (109)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Definition 2.1
  • Remark 2.2
  • Theorem 2.3
  • Definition 2.4
  • Lemma 2.5
  • proof
  • Lemma 2.6
  • proof
  • ...and 99 more