From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In algebraic geometry, the Mumford vanishing theorem proved by Mumford [1] in 1967 states that if L is a semi-ample invertible sheaf with Iitaka dimension at least 2 on a complex projective manifold, then

The Mumford vanishing theorem is related to the Ramanujam vanishing theorem, and is generalized by the Kawamata–Viehweg vanishing theorem.

References

  1. ^ Mumford, David (1967), "Pathologies. III", American Journal of Mathematics, 89 (1): 94–104, doi: 10.2307/2373099, ISSN  0002-9327, JSTOR  2373099, MR  0217091


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In algebraic geometry, the Mumford vanishing theorem proved by Mumford [1] in 1967 states that if L is a semi-ample invertible sheaf with Iitaka dimension at least 2 on a complex projective manifold, then

The Mumford vanishing theorem is related to the Ramanujam vanishing theorem, and is generalized by the Kawamata–Viehweg vanishing theorem.

References

  1. ^ Mumford, David (1967), "Pathologies. III", American Journal of Mathematics, 89 (1): 94–104, doi: 10.2307/2373099, ISSN  0002-9327, JSTOR  2373099, MR  0217091



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