Toric divisors and divisor classes¶
Let \(X\) be a toric variety
corresponding to a
rational polyhedral fan
\(\Sigma\). A toric divisor
\(D\) is a T-Weil
divisor over a given coefficient ring (usually \(\ZZ\) or \(\QQ\)), i.e. a formal
linear combination of torus-invariant subvarieties of \(X\) of codimension one.
In homogeneous coordinates \([z_0:\cdots:z_k]\), these are the subvarieties
\(\{z_i=0\}\). Note that there is a finite number of such subvarieties, one for
each ray of \(\Sigma\). We generally identify
- Toric divisor \(D\),
- Sheaf \(\mathcal{O}(D)\) (if \(D\) is Cartier, it is a line bundle),
- Support function \(\phi_D\) (if \(D\) is \(\QQ\)-Cartier, it is a function linear on each cone of \(\Sigma\)).
EXAMPLES:
We start with an illustration of basic divisor arithmetic:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6()
sage: Dx,Du,Dy,Dv,Dz,Dw = dP6.toric_divisor_group().gens()
sage: Dx
V(x)
sage: -Dx
-V(x)
sage: 2*Dx
2*V(x)
sage: Dx*2
2*V(x)
sage: (1/2)*Dx + Dy/3 - Dz
1/2*V(x) + 1/3*V(y) - V(z)
sage: Dx.parent()
Group of toric ZZ-Weil divisors
on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches
sage: (Dx/2).parent()
Group of toric QQ-Weil divisors
on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches
Now we create a more complicated variety to demonstrate divisors of different types:
sage: F = Fan(cones=[(0,1,2,3), (0,1,4)],
....: rays=[(1,1,1), (1,-1,1), (1,-1,-1), (1,1,-1), (0,0,1)])
sage: X = ToricVariety(F)
sage: QQ_Cartier = X.divisor([2,2,1,1,1])
sage: Cartier = 2 * QQ_Cartier
sage: Weil = X.divisor([1,1,1,0,0])
sage: QQ_Weil = 1/2 * Weil
sage: [QQ_Weil.is_QQ_Weil(),
....: QQ_Weil.is_Weil(),
....: QQ_Weil.is_QQ_Cartier(),
....: QQ_Weil.is_Cartier()]
[True, False, False, False]
sage: [Weil.is_QQ_Weil(),
....: Weil.is_Weil(),
....: Weil.is_QQ_Cartier(),
....: Weil.is_Cartier()]
[True, True, False, False]
sage: [QQ_Cartier.is_QQ_Weil(),
....: QQ_Cartier.is_Weil(),
....: QQ_Cartier.is_QQ_Cartier(),
....: QQ_Cartier.is_Cartier()]
[True, True, True, False]
sage: [Cartier.is_QQ_Weil(),
....: Cartier.is_Weil(),
....: Cartier.is_QQ_Cartier(),
....: Cartier.is_Cartier()]
[True, True, True, True]
The toric (\(\QQ\)-Weil) divisors on a toric variety \(X\) modulo linear
equivalence generate the divisor class group \(\mathrm{Cl}(X)\), implemented
by ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup
. If \(X\) is smooth, this equals the
Picard group \(\mathop{\mathrm{Pic}}(X)\). We continue using del Pezzo
surface of degree 6 introduced above:
sage: Cl = dP6.rational_class_group(); Cl
The toric rational divisor class group
of a 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches
sage: Cl.ngens()
4
sage: c0,c1,c2,c3 = Cl.gens()
sage: c = c0 + 2*c1 - c3; c
Divisor class [1, 2, 0, -1]
Divisors are mapped to their classes and lifted via:
sage: Dx.divisor_class()
Divisor class [1, 0, 0, 0]
sage: Dx.divisor_class() in Cl
True
sage: (-Dw+Dv+Dy).divisor_class()
Divisor class [1, 0, 0, 0]
sage: c0
Divisor class [1, 0, 0, 0]
sage: c0.lift()
V(x)
The (rational) divisor class group is where the Kaehler cone lives:
sage: Kc = dP6.Kaehler_cone(); Kc
4-d cone in 4-d lattice
sage: Kc.rays()
Divisor class [0, 1, 1, 0],
Divisor class [0, 0, 1, 1],
Divisor class [1, 1, 0, 0],
Divisor class [1, 1, 1, 0],
Divisor class [0, 1, 1, 1]
in Basis lattice of The toric rational divisor class group
of a 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches
sage: Kc.ray(1).lift()
V(y) + V(v)
Given a divisor \(D\), we have an associated line bundle (or a reflexive sheaf, if \(D\) is not Cartier) \(\mathcal{O}(D)\). Its sections are:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2()
sage: H = P2.divisor(0); H
V(x)
sage: H.sections()
(M(-1, 0), M(-1, 1), M(0, 0))
sage: H.sections_monomials()
(z, y, x)
Note that the space of sections is always spanned by monomials. Therefore, we can grade the sections (as homogeneous monomials) by their weight under rescaling individual coordinates. This weight data amounts to a point of the dual lattice.
In the same way, we can grade cohomology groups by their cohomological degree and a weight:
sage: M = P2.fan().lattice().dual()
sage: H.cohomology(deg=0, weight=M(-1,0))
Vector space of dimension 1 over Rational Field
sage: _.dimension()
1
Here is a more complicated example with \(h^1(dP_6, \mathcal{O}(D))=4\)
sage: D = dP6.divisor([0, 0, -1, 0, 2, -1])
sage: D.cohomology()
{0: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field,
1: Vector space of dimension 4 over Rational Field,
2: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field}
sage: D.cohomology(dim=True)
(0, 4, 0)
AUTHORS:
- Volker Braun, Andrey Novoseltsev (2010-09-07): initial version.
-
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
ToricDivisor
(toric_variety, arg=None, ring=None, check=True, reduce=True)¶ Construct a divisor of
toric_variety
.INPUT:
toric_variety
– atoric variety
;arg
– one of the following description of the toric divisor to be constructed:None
or 0 (the trivial divisor);- monomial in the homogeneous coordinates;
- one-dimensional cone of the fan of
toric_variety
or a lattice point generating such a cone; - sequence of rational numbers, specifying multiplicities for each of the toric divisors.
ring
– usually either \(\ZZ\) or \(\QQ\). The base ring of the divisor group. Ifring
is not specified, a coefficient ring suitable forarg
is derived.check
– bool (default: True). Whether to coerce coefficients into base ring. Setting it toFalse
can speed up construction.reduce
– reduce (default: True). Whether to combine common terms. Setting it toFalse
can speed up construction.
Warning
The coefficients of the divisor must be in the base ring and the terms must be reduced. If you set
check=False
and/orreduce=False
it is your responsibility to pass valid input dataarg
.OUTPUT:
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.toric.divisor import ToricDivisor sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, [(1,dP6.gen(2)), (1,dP6.gen(1))]) V(u) + V(y) sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, (0,1,1,0,0,0), ring=QQ) V(u) + V(y) sage: dP6.inject_variables() Defining x, u, y, v, z, w sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, u+y) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: u + y is not a monomial! sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, u*y) V(u) + V(y) sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, dP6.fan(dim=1)[2] ) V(y) sage: cone = Cone(dP6.fan(dim=1)[2]) sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, cone) V(y) sage: N = dP6.fan().lattice() sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, N(1,1) ) V(w)
We attempt to guess the correct base ring:
sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, [(1/2,u)]) 1/2*V(u) sage: _.parent() Group of toric QQ-Weil divisors on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, [(1/2,u), (1/2,u)]) V(u) sage: _.parent() Group of toric ZZ-Weil divisors on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches sage: ToricDivisor(dP6, [(u,u)]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... TypeError: Cannot deduce coefficient ring for [(u, u)]!
-
class
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
ToricDivisorGroup
(toric_variety, base_ring)¶ Bases:
sage.schemes.generic.divisor_group.DivisorGroup_generic
The group of (\(\QQ\)-T-Weil) divisors on a toric variety.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: P2.toric_divisor_group() Group of toric ZZ-Weil divisors on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 3 affine patches
-
class
Element
(v, parent, check=True, reduce=True)¶
-
base_extend
(R)¶ Extend the scalars of
self
toR
.INPUT:
R
– ring.
OUTPUT:
- toric divisor group.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: DivZZ = P2.toric_divisor_group() sage: DivQQ = P2.toric_divisor_group(base_ring=QQ) sage: DivZZ.base_extend(QQ) is DivQQ True
-
gen
(i)¶ Return the
i
-th generator of the divisor group.INPUT:
i
– integer.
OUTPUT:
The divisor \(z_i=0\), where \(z_i\) is the \(i\)-th homogeneous coordinate.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: TDiv = P2.toric_divisor_group() sage: TDiv.gen(2) V(z)
-
gens
()¶ Return the generators of the divisor group.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: TDiv = P2.toric_divisor_group() sage: TDiv.gens() (V(x), V(y), V(z))
-
ngens
()¶ Return the number of generators.
OUTPUT:
The number of generators of
self
, which equals the number of rays in the fan of the toric variety.EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: TDiv = P2.toric_divisor_group() sage: TDiv.ngens() 3
-
class
-
class
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
ToricDivisor_generic
(v, parent, check=True, reduce=True)¶ Bases:
sage.schemes.generic.divisor.Divisor_generic
Construct a
(toric Weil) divisor
on the given toric variety.INPUT:
v
– a list of tuples (multiplicity, coordinate).parent
–ToricDivisorGroup
. The parent divisor group.check
– boolean. Type-check the entries ofv
, seesage.schemes.generic.divisor_group.DivisorGroup_generic.__init__()
.reduce
– boolean. Combine coefficients inv
, seesage.schemes.generic.divisor_group.DivisorGroup_generic.__init__()
.
Warning
Do not construct
ToricDivisor_generic
objects manually. Instead, use either the functionToricDivisor()
or the methoddivisor()
of toric varieties.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: ray = dP6.fan().ray(0) sage: ray N(0, 1) sage: D = dP6.divisor(ray); D V(x) sage: D.parent() Group of toric ZZ-Weil divisors on 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches
-
Chern_character
()¶ Return the Chern character of the sheaf \(\mathcal{O}(D)\) defined by the divisor \(D\).
You can also use a shortcut
ch()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: N = dP6.fan().lattice() sage: D3 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(0,1) )) sage: D5 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(-1,-1) )) sage: D6 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(0,-1) )) sage: D = -D3 + 2*D5 - D6 sage: D.Chern_character() [5*w^2 + y - 2*v + w + 1] sage: dP6.integrate( D.ch() * dP6.Td() ) -4
-
Chow_cycle
(ring=Integer Ring)¶ Returns the Chow homology class of the divisor.
INPUT:
ring
– EitherZZ
(default) orQQ
. The base ring of the Chow group.
OUTPUT:
The
ChowCycle
represented by the divisor.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: cone = dP6.fan(1)[0] sage: D = dP6.divisor(cone); D V(x) sage: D.Chow_cycle() ( 0 | -1, 0, 1, 1 | 0 ) sage: dP6.Chow_group()(cone) ( 0 | -1, 0, 1, 1 | 0 )
-
Kodaira_map
(names='z')¶ Return the Kodaira map.
The Kodaira map is the rational map \(X_\Sigma \to \mathbb{P}^{n-1}\), where \(n\) equals the number of sections. It is defined by the monomial sections of the line bundle.
If the divisor is ample and the toric variety smooth or of dimension 2, then this is an embedding.
INPUT:
names
– string (optional; default'z'
). The variable names for the destination projective space.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P1.<u,v> = toric_varieties.P1() sage: D = -P1.K() sage: D.Kodaira_map() Scheme morphism: From: 1-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 2 affine patches To: Closed subscheme of Projective Space of dimension 2 over Rational Field defined by: -z1^2 + z0*z2 Defn: Defined on coordinates by sending [u : v] to (v^2 : u*v : u^2) sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: D = -dP6.K() sage: D.Kodaira_map(names='x') Scheme morphism: From: 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 6 affine patches To: Closed subscheme of Projective Space of dimension 6 over Rational Field defined by: -x1*x5 + x0*x6, -x2*x3 + x0*x5, -x1*x3 + x0*x4, x4*x5 - x3*x6, -x1*x2 + x0*x3, x3*x5 - x2*x6, x3*x4 - x1*x6, x3^2 - x1*x5, x2*x4 - x1*x5, -x1*x5^2 + x2*x3*x6, -x1*x5^3 + x2^2*x6^2 Defn: Defined on coordinates by sending [x : u : y : v : z : w] to (x*u^2*y^2*v : x^2*u^2*y*w : u*y^2*v^2*z : x*u*y*v*z*w : x^2*u*z*w^2 : y*v^2*z^2*w : x*v*z^2*w^2)
-
ch
()¶ Return the Chern character of the sheaf \(\mathcal{O}(D)\) defined by the divisor \(D\).
You can also use a shortcut
ch()
.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: N = dP6.fan().lattice() sage: D3 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(0,1) )) sage: D5 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(-1,-1) )) sage: D6 = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().cone_containing( N(0,-1) )) sage: D = -D3 + 2*D5 - D6 sage: D.Chern_character() [5*w^2 + y - 2*v + w + 1] sage: dP6.integrate( D.ch() * dP6.Td() ) -4
-
coefficient
(x)¶ Return the coefficient of
x
.INPUT:
x
– one of the homogeneous coordinates, either given by the variable or its index.
OUTPUT:
The coefficient of
x
.EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: D = P2.divisor((11,12,13)); D 11*V(x) + 12*V(y) + 13*V(z) sage: D.coefficient(1) 12 sage: P2.inject_variables() Defining x, y, z sage: D.coefficient(y) 12
-
cohomology
(weight=None, deg=None, dim=False)¶ Return the cohomology of the line bundle associated to the Cartier divisor or reflexive sheaf associated to the Weil divisor.
Note
The cohomology of a toric line bundle/reflexive sheaf is graded by the usual degree as well as by the \(M\)-lattice.
INPUT:
weight
– (optional) a point of the \(M\)-lattice.deg
– (optional) the degree of the cohomology group.dim
– boolean. IfFalse
(default), the cohomology groups are returned as vector spaces. IfTrue
, only the dimension of the vector space(s) is returned.
OUTPUT:
The vector space \(H^\text{deg}(X,\mathcal{O}(D))\) (if
deg
is specified) or a dictionary{degree:cohomology(degree)}
of all degrees between 0 and the dimension of the variety.If
weight
is specified, return only the subspace \(H^\text{deg}(X,\mathcal{O}(D))_\text{weight}\) of the cohomology of the given weight.If
dim==True
, the dimension of the cohomology vector space is returned instead of actual vector space. Moreover, ifdeg
was not specified, a vector whose entries are the dimensions is returned instead of a dictionary.ALGORITHM:
Roughly, Chech cohomology is used to compute the cohomology. For toric divisors, the local sections can be chosen to be monomials (instead of general homogeneous polynomials), this is the reason for the extra grading by \(m\in M\). General references would be [Ful1993], [CLS2011]. Here are some salient features of our implementation:
First, a finite set of \(M\)-lattice points is identified that supports the cohomology. The toric divisor determines a (polyhedral) chamber decomposition of \(M_\RR\), see Section 9.1 and Figure 4 of [CLS2011]. The cohomology vanishes on the non-compact chambers. Hence, the convex hull of the vertices of the chamber decomposition contains all non-vanishing cohomology groups. This is returned by the private method
_sheaf_cohomology_support()
.It would be more efficient, but more difficult to implement, to keep track of all of the individual chambers. We leave this for future work.
For each point \(m\in M\), the weight-\(m\) part of the cohomology can be rewritten as the cohomology of a simplicial complex, see Exercise 9.1.10 of [CLS2011], [Per2007]. This is returned by the private method
_sheaf_complex()
.The simplicial complex is the same for all points in a chamber, but we currently do not make use of this and compute each point \(m\in M\) separately.
Finally, the cohomology (over \(\QQ\)) of this simplicial complex is computed in the private method
_sheaf_cohomology()
. Summing over the supporting points \(m\in M\) yields the cohomology of the sheaf`.
EXAMPLES:
Example 9.1.7 of Cox, Little, Schenck: “Toric Varieties” [CLS2011]:
sage: F = Fan(cones=[(0,1), (1,2), (2,3), (3,4), (4,5), (5,0)], ....: rays=[(1,0), (1,1), (0,1), (-1,0), (-1,-1), (0,-1)]) sage: dP6 = ToricVariety(F) sage: D3 = dP6.divisor(2) sage: D5 = dP6.divisor(4) sage: D6 = dP6.divisor(5) sage: D = -D3 + 2*D5 - D6 sage: D.cohomology() {0: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field, 1: Vector space of dimension 4 over Rational Field, 2: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field} sage: D.cohomology(deg=1) Vector space of dimension 4 over Rational Field sage: M = F.dual_lattice() sage: D.cohomology( M(0,0) ) {0: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field, 1: Vector space of dimension 1 over Rational Field, 2: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field} sage: D.cohomology( weight=M(0,0), deg=1 ) Vector space of dimension 1 over Rational Field sage: dP6.integrate( D.ch() * dP6.Td() ) -4
Note the different output options:
sage: D.cohomology() {0: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field, 1: Vector space of dimension 4 over Rational Field, 2: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field} sage: D.cohomology(dim=True) (0, 4, 0) sage: D.cohomology(weight=M(0,0)) {0: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field, 1: Vector space of dimension 1 over Rational Field, 2: Vector space of dimension 0 over Rational Field} sage: D.cohomology(weight=M(0,0), dim=True) (0, 1, 0) sage: D.cohomology(deg=1) Vector space of dimension 4 over Rational Field sage: D.cohomology(deg=1, dim=True) 4 sage: D.cohomology(weight=M(0,0), deg=1) Vector space of dimension 1 over Rational Field sage: D.cohomology(weight=M(0,0), deg=1, dim=True) 1
Here is a Weil (non-Cartier) divisor example:
sage: K = toric_varieties.Cube_nonpolyhedral().K() sage: K.is_Weil() True sage: K.is_QQ_Cartier() False sage: K.cohomology(dim=True) (0, 0, 0, 1)
-
cohomology_class
()¶ Return the degree-2 cohomology class associated to the divisor.
OUTPUT:
Returns the corresponding cohomology class as an instance of
CohomologyClass
. The cohomology class is the first Chern class of the associated line bundle \(\mathcal{O}(D)\).EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: D = dP6.divisor(dP6.fan().ray(0) ) sage: D.cohomology_class() [y + v - w]
-
cohomology_support
()¶ Return the weights for which the cohomology groups do not vanish.
OUTPUT:
A tuple of dual lattice points.
self.cohomology(weight=m)
does not vanish if and only ifm
is in the output.Note
This method is provided for educational purposes and it is not an efficient way of computing the cohomology groups.
EXAMPLES:
sage: F = Fan(cones=[(0,1), (1,2), (2,3), (3,4), (4,5), (5,0)], ....: rays=[(1,0), (1,1), (0,1), (-1,0), (-1,-1), (0,-1)]) sage: dP6 = ToricVariety(F) sage: D3 = dP6.divisor(2) sage: D5 = dP6.divisor(4) sage: D6 = dP6.divisor(5) sage: D = -D3 + 2*D5 - D6 sage: D.cohomology_support() (M(0, 0), M(1, 0), M(2, 0), M(1, 1))
-
divisor_class
()¶ Return the linear equivalence class of the divisor.
OUTPUT:
Returns the class of the divisor in \(\mathop{Cl}(X) \otimes_\ZZ \QQ\) as an instance of
ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup
.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP6 = toric_varieties.dP6() sage: D = dP6.divisor(0) sage: D.divisor_class() Divisor class [1, 0, 0, 0]
-
function_value
(point)¶ Return the value of the support function at
point
.Let \(X\) be the ambient toric variety of
self
, \(\Sigma\) the fan associated to \(X\), and \(N\) the ambient lattice of \(\Sigma\).INPUT:
point
– either an integer, interpreted as the index of a ray of \(\Sigma\), or a point of the lattice \(N\).
OUTPUT:
- an integer or a rational number.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: D = P2.divisor([11,22,44]) # total degree 77 sage: D.function_value(0) 11 sage: N = P2.fan().lattice() sage: D.function_value( N(1,1) ) 33 sage: D.function_value( P2.fan().ray(0) ) 11
-
is_Cartier
()¶ Return whether the divisor is a Cartier-divisor.
Note
The sheaf \(\mathcal{O}(D)\) associated to the given divisor \(D\) is a line bundle if and only if the divisor is Cartier.
EXAMPLES:
sage: X = toric_varieties.P4_11169() sage: D = X.divisor(3) sage: D.is_Cartier() False sage: D.is_QQ_Cartier() True
-
is_QQ_Cartier
()¶ Return whether the divisor is a \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor.
A \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor is a divisor such that some multiple of it is Cartier.
EXAMPLES:
sage: X = toric_varieties.P4_11169() sage: D = X.divisor(3) sage: D.is_QQ_Cartier() True sage: X = toric_varieties.Cube_face_fan() sage: D = X.divisor(3) sage: D.is_QQ_Cartier() False
-
is_QQ_Weil
()¶ Return whether the divisor is a \(\QQ\)-Weil-divisor.
Note
This function returns always
True
sinceToricDivisor
can only describe \(\QQ\)-Weil divisors.EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: D = P2.divisor([1,2,3]) sage: D.is_QQ_Weil() True sage: (D/2).is_QQ_Weil() True
-
is_Weil
()¶ Return whether the divisor is a Weil-divisor.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: D = P2.divisor([1,2,3]) sage: D.is_Weil() True sage: (D/2).is_Weil() False
-
is_ample
()¶ Return whether a \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor is ample.
OUTPUT:
True
if the divisor is in the ample cone,False
otherwise.
Note
- For a QQ-Cartier divisor, some positive integral multiple is Cartier. We return whether this associated divisor is ample, i.e. corresponds to an ample line bundle.
- In the orbifold case, the ample cone is an open
and full-dimensional cone in the rational divisor class
group
ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup
. - If the variety has worse than orbifold singularities,
the ample cone is a full-dimensional cone within the
(not full-dimensional) subspace spanned by the Cartier
divisors inside the rational (Weil) divisor class group,
that is,
ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup
. The ample cone is then relative open (open in this subspace). - See also
is_nef()
. - A toric divisor is ample if and only if its support function is strictly convex.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: K = P2.K() sage: (+K).is_ample() False sage: (0*K).is_ample() False sage: (-K).is_ample() True
Example 6.1.3, 6.1.11, 6.1.17 of [CLS2011]:
sage: from itertools import product sage: fan = Fan(cones=[(0,1), (1,2), (2,3), (3,0)], ....: rays=[(-1,2), (0,1), (1,0), (0,-1)]) sage: F2 = ToricVariety(fan,'u1, u2, u3, u4') sage: def D(a,b): return a*F2.divisor(2) + b*F2.divisor(3) sage: [ (a,b) for a,b in product(range(-3,3), repeat=2) ....: if D(a,b).is_ample() ] [(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 1), (2, 2)] sage: [ (a,b) for a,b in product(range(-3,3), repeat=2) ....: if D(a,b).is_nef() ] [(0, 0), (0, 1), (0, 2), (1, 0), (1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 0), (2, 1), (2, 2)]
A (worse than orbifold) singular Fano threefold:
sage: points = [(1,0,0),(0,1,0),(0,0,1),(-2,0,-1),(-2,-1,0),(-3,-1,-1),(1,1,1)] sage: facets = [[0,1,3],[0,1,6],[0,2,4],[0,2,6],[0,3,5],[0,4,5],[1,2,3,4,5,6]] sage: X = ToricVariety(Fan(cones=facets, rays=points)) sage: X.rational_class_group().dimension() 4 sage: X.Kaehler_cone().rays() Divisor class [1, 0, 0, 0] in Basis lattice of The toric rational divisor class group of a 3-d toric variety covered by 7 affine patches sage: antiK = -X.K() sage: antiK.divisor_class() Divisor class [2, 0, 0, 0] sage: antiK.is_ample() True
-
is_integral
()¶ Return whether the coefficients of the divisor are all integral.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: DZZ = P2.toric_divisor_group(base_ring=ZZ).gen(0); DZZ V(x) sage: DQQ = P2.toric_divisor_group(base_ring=QQ).gen(0); DQQ V(x) sage: DZZ.is_integral() True sage: DQQ.is_integral() True
-
is_nef
()¶ Return whether a \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor is nef.
OUTPUT:
True
if the divisor is in the closure of the ample cone,False
otherwise.
Note
- For a \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor, some positive integral multiple is Cartier. We return whether this associated divisor is nef.
- The nef cone is the closure of the ample cone.
- See also
is_ample()
. - A toric divisor is nef if and only if its support function is convex (but not necessarily strictly convex).
- A toric Cartier divisor is nef if and only if its linear system is basepoint free.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: K = P2.K() sage: (+K).is_nef() False sage: (0*K).is_nef() True sage: (-K).is_nef() True
Example 6.1.3, 6.1.11, 6.1.17 of [CLS2011]:
sage: from itertools import product sage: fan = Fan(cones=[(0,1), (1,2), (2,3), (3,0)], ....: rays=[(-1,2), (0,1), (1,0), (0,-1)]) sage: F2 = ToricVariety(fan,'u1, u2, u3, u4') sage: def D(a,b): return a*F2.divisor(2) + b*F2.divisor(3) sage: [ (a,b) for a,b in product(range(-3,3), repeat=2) ....: if D(a,b).is_ample() ] [(1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 1), (2, 2)] sage: [ (a,b) for a,b in product(range(-3,3), repeat=2) ....: if D(a,b).is_nef() ] [(0, 0), (0, 1), (0, 2), (1, 0), (1, 1), (1, 2), (2, 0), (2, 1), (2, 2)]
-
m
(cone)¶ Return \(m_\sigma\) representing \(\phi_D\) on
cone
.Let \(X\) be the ambient toric variety of this divisor \(D\) associated to the fan \(\Sigma\) in lattice \(N\). Let \(M\) be the lattice dual to \(N\). Given the cone \(\sigma =\langle v_1, \dots, v_k \rangle\) in \(\Sigma\), this method searches for a vector \(m_\sigma \in M_\QQ\) such that \(\phi_D(v_i) = \langle m_\sigma, v_i \rangle\) for all \(i=1, \dots, k\), where \(\phi_D\) is the support function of \(D\).
INPUT:
cone
– A cone in the fan of the toric variety.
OUTPUT:
- If possible, a point of lattice \(M\).
- If the dual vector cannot be chosen integral, a rational vector is returned.
- If there is no such vector (i.e.
self
is not even a \(\QQ\)-Cartier divisor), aValueError
is raised.
EXAMPLES:
sage: F = Fan(cones=[(0,1,2,3), (0,1,4)], ....: rays=[(1,1,1), (1,-1,1), (1,-1,-1), (1,1,-1), (0,0,1)]) sage: X = ToricVariety(F) sage: square_cone = X.fan().cone_containing(0,1,2,3) sage: triangle_cone = X.fan().cone_containing(0,1,4) sage: ray = X.fan().cone_containing(0) sage: QQ_Cartier = X.divisor([2,2,1,1,1]) sage: QQ_Cartier.m(ray) M(0, 2, 0) sage: QQ_Cartier.m(square_cone) (3/2, 0, 1/2) sage: QQ_Cartier.m(triangle_cone) M(1, 0, 1) sage: QQ_Cartier.m(Cone(triangle_cone)) M(1, 0, 1) sage: Weil = X.divisor([1,1,1,0,0]) sage: Weil.m(square_cone) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: V(z0) + V(z1) + V(z2) is not QQ-Cartier, cannot choose a dual vector on 3-d cone of Rational polyhedral fan in 3-d lattice N! sage: Weil.m(triangle_cone) M(1, 0, 0)
-
monomial
(point)¶ Return the monomial in the homogeneous coordinate ring associated to the
point
in the dual lattice.INPUT:
point
– a point inself.variety().fan().dual_lattice()
.
OUTPUT:
For a fixed divisor
D
, the sections are generated by monomials inToricVariety.coordinate_ring
. Alternatively, the monomials can be described as \(M\)-lattice points in the polyhedronD.polyhedron()
. This method converts the points \(m\in M\) into homogeneous polynomials.EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: O3_P2 = -P2.K() sage: M = P2.fan().dual_lattice() sage: O3_P2.monomial( M(0,0) ) x*y*z
-
move_away_from
(cone)¶ Move the divisor away from the orbit closure of
cone
.INPUT:
- A
cone
of the fan of the toric variety.
OUTPUT:
A (rationally equivalent) divisor that is moved off the orbit closure of the given cone.
Note
A divisor that is Weil but not Cartier might be impossible to move away. In this case, a
ValueError
is raised.EXAMPLES:
sage: F = Fan(cones=[(0,1,2,3), (0,1,4)], ....: rays=[(1,1,1), (1,-1,1), (1,-1,-1), (1,1,-1), (0,0,1)]) sage: X = ToricVariety(F) sage: square_cone = X.fan().cone_containing(0,1,2,3) sage: triangle_cone = X.fan().cone_containing(0,1,4) sage: line_cone = square_cone.intersection(triangle_cone) sage: Cartier = X.divisor([2,2,1,1,1]) sage: Cartier 2*V(z0) + 2*V(z1) + V(z2) + V(z3) + V(z4) sage: Cartier.move_away_from(line_cone) -V(z2) - V(z3) + V(z4) sage: QQ_Weil = X.divisor([1,0,1,1,0]) sage: QQ_Weil.move_away_from(line_cone) V(z2)
- A
-
polyhedron
()¶ Return the polyhedron \(P_D\subset M\) associated to a toric divisor \(D\).
OUTPUT:
\(P_D\) as an instance of
Polyhedron_base
.EXAMPLES:
sage: dP7 = toric_varieties.dP7() sage: D = dP7.divisor(2) sage: P_D = D.polyhedron(); P_D A 0-dimensional polyhedron in QQ^2 defined as the convex hull of 1 vertex sage: P_D.Vrepresentation() (A vertex at (0, 0),) sage: D.is_nef() False sage: dP7.integrate( D.ch() * dP7.Td() ) 1 sage: P_antiK = (-dP7.K()).polyhedron(); P_antiK A 2-dimensional polyhedron in QQ^2 defined as the convex hull of 5 vertices sage: P_antiK.Vrepresentation() (A vertex at (1, -1), A vertex at (0, 1), A vertex at (1, 0), A vertex at (-1, 1), A vertex at (-1, -1)) sage: P_antiK.integral_points() ((-1, -1), (-1, 0), (-1, 1), (0, -1), (0, 0), (0, 1), (1, -1), (1, 0))
Example 6.1.3, 6.1.11, 6.1.17 of [CLS2011]:
sage: fan = Fan(cones=[(0,1), (1,2), (2,3), (3,0)], ....: rays=[(-1,2), (0,1), (1,0), (0,-1)]) sage: F2 = ToricVariety(fan,'u1, u2, u3, u4') sage: D = F2.divisor(3) sage: D.polyhedron().Vrepresentation() (A vertex at (0, 0), A vertex at (2, 1), A vertex at (0, 1)) sage: Dprime = F2.divisor(1) + D sage: Dprime.polyhedron().Vrepresentation() (A vertex at (2, 1), A vertex at (0, 1), A vertex at (0, 0)) sage: D.is_ample() False sage: D.is_nef() True sage: Dprime.is_nef() False
A more complicated example where \(P_D\) is not a lattice polytope:
sage: X = toric_varieties.BCdlOG_base() sage: antiK = -X.K() sage: P_D = antiK.polyhedron() sage: P_D A 3-dimensional polyhedron in QQ^3 defined as the convex hull of 8 vertices sage: P_D.Vrepresentation() (A vertex at (1, -1, 0), A vertex at (1, -3, 1), A vertex at (1, 1, 1), A vertex at (-5, 1, 1), A vertex at (1, 1, -1/2), A vertex at (1, 1/2, -1/2), A vertex at (-1, -1, 0), A vertex at (-5, -3, 1)) sage: P_D.Hrepresentation() (An inequality (-1, 0, 0) x + 1 >= 0, An inequality (0, -1, 0) x + 1 >= 0, An inequality (0, 0, -1) x + 1 >= 0, An inequality (1, 0, 4) x + 1 >= 0, An inequality (0, 1, 3) x + 1 >= 0, An inequality (0, 1, 2) x + 1 >= 0) sage: P_D.integral_points() ((-1, -1, 0), (0, -1, 0), (1, -1, 0), (-1, 0, 0), (0, 0, 0), (1, 0, 0), (-1, 1, 0), (0, 1, 0), (1, 1, 0), (-5, -3, 1), (-4, -3, 1), (-3, -3, 1), (-2, -3, 1), (-1, -3, 1), (0, -3, 1), (1, -3, 1), (-5, -2, 1), (-4, -2, 1), (-3, -2, 1), (-2, -2, 1), (-1, -2, 1), (0, -2, 1), (1, -2, 1), (-5, -1, 1), (-4, -1, 1), (-3, -1, 1), (-2, -1, 1), (-1, -1, 1), (0, -1, 1), (1, -1, 1), (-5, 0, 1), (-4, 0, 1), (-3, 0, 1), (-2, 0, 1), (-1, 0, 1), (0, 0, 1), (1, 0, 1), (-5, 1, 1), (-4, 1, 1), (-3, 1, 1), (-2, 1, 1), (-1, 1, 1), (0, 1, 1), (1, 1, 1))
-
sections
()¶ Return the global sections (as points of the \(M\)-lattice) of the line bundle (or reflexive sheaf) associated to the divisor.
OUTPUT:
tuple
of points of lattice \(M\).
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: P2.fan().nrays() 3 sage: P2.divisor(0).sections() (M(-1, 0), M(-1, 1), M(0, 0)) sage: P2.divisor(1).sections() (M(0, -1), M(0, 0), M(1, -1)) sage: P2.divisor(2).sections() (M(0, 0), M(0, 1), M(1, 0))
The divisor can be non-nef yet still have sections:
sage: rays = [(1,0,0),(0,1,0),(0,0,1),(-2,0,-1),(-2,-1,0),(-3,-1,-1),(1,1,1),(-1,0,0)] sage: cones = [[0,1,3],[0,1,6],[0,2,4],[0,2,6],[0,3,5],[0,4,5],[1,3,7],[1,6,7],[2,4,7],[2,6,7],[3,5,7],[4,5,7]] sage: X = ToricVariety(Fan(rays=rays,cones=cones)) sage: D = X.divisor(2); D V(z2) sage: D.is_nef() False sage: D.sections() (M(0, 0, 0),) sage: D.cohomology(dim=True) (1, 0, 0, 0)
-
sections_monomials
()¶ Return the global sections of the line bundle associated to the Cartier divisor.
The sections are described as monomials in the generalized homogeneous coordinates.
OUTPUT:
- tuple of monomials in the coordinate ring of
self
.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: P2.fan().nrays() 3 sage: P2.divisor(0).sections_monomials() (z, y, x) sage: P2.divisor(1).sections_monomials() (z, y, x) sage: P2.divisor(2).sections_monomials() (z, y, x)
From [Cox] page 38:
sage: lp = LatticePolytope([(1,0),(1,1),(0,1),(-1,0),(0,-1)]) sage: lp 2-d reflexive polytope #5 in 2-d lattice M sage: dP7 = ToricVariety( FaceFan(lp), 'x1, x2, x3, x4, x5') sage: AK = -dP7.K() sage: AK.sections() (N(-1, 0), N(-1, 1), N(0, -1), N(0, 0), N(0, 1), N(1, -1), N(1, 0), N(1, 1)) sage: AK.sections_monomials() (x3*x4^2*x5, x2*x3^2*x4^2, x1*x4*x5^2, x1*x2*x3*x4*x5, x1*x2^2*x3^2*x4, x1^2*x2*x5^2, x1^2*x2^2*x3*x5, x1^2*x2^3*x3^2)
- tuple of monomials in the coordinate ring of
-
class
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup
(toric_variety)¶ Bases:
sage.modules.free_module.FreeModule_ambient_field
,sage.structure.unique_representation.UniqueRepresentation
The rational divisor class group of a toric variety.
The T-Weil divisor class group \(\mathop{Cl}(X)\) of a toric variety \(X\) is a finitely generated abelian group and can contain torsion. Its rank equals the number of rays in the fan of \(X\) minus the dimension of \(X\).
The rational divisor class group is \(\mathop{Cl}(X) \otimes_\ZZ \QQ\) and never includes torsion. If \(X\) is smooth, this equals the Picard group \(\mathop{\mathrm{Pic}}(X)\), whose elements are the isomorphism classes of line bundles on \(X\). The group law (which we write as addition) is the tensor product of the line bundles. The Picard group of a toric variety is always torsion-free.
Warning
Do not instantiate this class yourself. Use
rational_class_group()
method oftoric varieties
if you need the divisor class group. Or you can obtain it as the parent of any divisor class constructed, for example, viaToricDivisor_generic.divisor_class()
.INPUT:
toric_variety
–toric variety <sage.schemes.toric.variety.ToricVariety_field
.
OUTPUT:
- rational divisor class group of a toric variety.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: P2.rational_class_group() The toric rational divisor class group of a 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 3 affine patches sage: D = P2.divisor(0); D V(x) sage: Dclass = D.divisor_class(); Dclass Divisor class [1] sage: Dclass.lift() V(y) sage: Dclass.parent() The toric rational divisor class group of a 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 3 affine patches
-
Element
¶ alias of
sage.schemes.toric.divisor_class.ToricRationalDivisorClass
-
class
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
ToricRationalDivisorClassGroup_basis_lattice
(group)¶ Bases:
sage.modules.free_module.FreeModule_ambient_pid
Construct the basis lattice of the
group
.INPUT:
group
–toric rational divisor class group
.
OUTPUT:
- the basis lattice of
group
.
EXAMPLES:
sage: P1xP1 = toric_varieties.P1xP1() sage: L = P1xP1.Kaehler_cone().lattice() sage: L Basis lattice of The toric rational divisor class group of a 2-d CPR-Fano toric variety covered by 4 affine patches sage: L.basis() [ Divisor class [1, 0], Divisor class [0, 1] ]
-
Element
¶ alias of
sage.schemes.toric.divisor_class.ToricRationalDivisorClass
-
sage.schemes.toric.divisor.
is_ToricDivisor
(x)¶ Test whether
x
is a toric divisor.INPUT:
x
– anything.
OUTPUT:
True
ifx
is an instance ofToricDivisor_generic
andFalse
otherwise.
EXAMPLES:
sage: from sage.schemes.toric.divisor import is_ToricDivisor sage: is_ToricDivisor(1) False sage: P2 = toric_varieties.P2() sage: D = P2.divisor(0); D V(x) sage: is_ToricDivisor(D) True