Kleiman's theorem

In algebraic geometry, Kleiman's theorem, introduced in (Kleiman 1974), concerns dimension and smoothness of scheme-theoretic intersection after some perturbation of factors in the intersection.

Precisely, it states:[1] given a connected algebraic group G acting transitively on an algebraic variety X over an algebraically closed field k and morphisms of varieties, G contains a nonempty open subset such that for each g in the set,

  1. either is empty or has pure dimension , where is ,
  2. (Kleiman–Bertini theorem) If are smooth varieties and if the characteristic of the base field k is zero, then is smooth.

Statement 1 establishes a version of Chow's moving lemma:[2] after some perturbation of cycles on X, their intersection has expected dimension.

References

  1. Fulton, Appendix B. 9.2.
  2. Fulton, Example 11.4.5.
  • Eisenbud, David; Joe, Harris (2016), 3264 and All That: A Second Course in Algebraic Geometry, C. U.P., ISBN 978-1107602724
  • Steven Kleiman, "The transversality of a generic translate," Math. 28 (1974), 287–297.
  • William Fulton. (1998), Intersection theory, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge., 2 (2nd ed.), Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-540-62046-4, MR 1644323


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