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Higher Gaussian maps on the hyperelliptic locus and second fundamental form

Dario Faro, Paola Frediani, Antonio Lacopo

Abstract

In this paper we study higher even Gaussian maps of the canonical bundle on hyperelliptic curves and we determine their rank, giving explicit descriptions of their kernels. Then we use this descriptions to investigate the hyperelliptic Torelli map $j_h$ and its second fundamental form. We study isotropic subspaces of the tangent space $T_{{\mathcal H}_g, [C]}$ to the moduli space ${\mathcal H}_g$ of hyperelliptic curves of genus $g$ at a point $[C]$, with respect to the second fundamental form $ρ_{HE}$ of $j_h$. In particular, for any Weierstrass point $p \in C$, we construct a subspace $V_p$ of dimension $\lfloor\frac{g}{2} \rfloor$ of $T_{{\mathcal H}_g, [C]}$ generated by higher Schiffer variations at $p$, such that the only isotropic tangent direction $ζ\in V_p$ for the image of $ρ_{HE}$ is the standard Schiffer variation $ξ_p$ at the Weierstrass point $p \in C$.

Higher Gaussian maps on the hyperelliptic locus and second fundamental form

Abstract

In this paper we study higher even Gaussian maps of the canonical bundle on hyperelliptic curves and we determine their rank, giving explicit descriptions of their kernels. Then we use this descriptions to investigate the hyperelliptic Torelli map and its second fundamental form. We study isotropic subspaces of the tangent space to the moduli space of hyperelliptic curves of genus at a point , with respect to the second fundamental form of . In particular, for any Weierstrass point , we construct a subspace of dimension of generated by higher Schiffer variations at , such that the only isotropic tangent direction for the image of is the standard Schiffer variation at the Weierstrass point .

Paper Structure

This paper contains 6 sections, 17 theorems, 149 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

(See Theorem rteoremainrese) Let $C$ be a hyperelliptic curve of genus $g \geq 3$ . Then for every $0\leq k \leq \frac{g-1}{2}$ Then, for every $k> \lfloor\frac{g-1}{2}\rfloor$ the domain of $\mu_{2k}$ is $0$, hence $Rank (\mu_{2k} ) =0$.

Theorems & Definitions (40)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Remark 2.1
  • Theorem 3.1
  • Remark 3.2
  • Lemma 3.3
  • Lemma 3.4
  • Lemma 3.5
  • proof
  • ...and 30 more