Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part 1 Multiplication on the tangent bundle
- Part 2 Frobenius manifolds, Gauß–Manin connections, and moduli spaces for hypersurface singularities
- 6 Introduction to part 2
- 7 Connections over the punctured plane
- 8 Meromorphic connections
- 9 Frobenius manifolds and second structure connections
- 10 Gauß–Manin connections for hypersurface singularities
- 11 Frobenius manifolds for hypersurface singularities
- 12 μ-constant stratum
- 13 Moduli spaces for singularities
- 14 Variance of the spectral numbers
- Bibliography
- Index
8 - Meromorphic connections
from Part 2 - Frobenius manifolds, Gauß–Manin connections, and moduli spaces for hypersurface singularities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part 1 Multiplication on the tangent bundle
- Part 2 Frobenius manifolds, Gauß–Manin connections, and moduli spaces for hypersurface singularities
- 6 Introduction to part 2
- 7 Connections over the punctured plane
- 8 Meromorphic connections
- 9 Frobenius manifolds and second structure connections
- 10 Gauß–Manin connections for hypersurface singularities
- 11 Frobenius manifolds for hypersurface singularities
- 12 μ-constant stratum
- 13 Moduli spaces for singularities
- 14 Variance of the spectral numbers
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Section 8.1 is a reminder of logarithmic vector fields and differential forms and some other classical facts. In sections 8.2–8.4 extensions with logarithmic poles along a divisor D ⊂ M of the sheaf of holomorphic sections of a flat vector bundle on M – D are discussed. In the case of a smooth divisor D in section 3.2, there are three important tools for working with such extensions: the correspondence to certain filtrations, the classical residue endomorphism along D, and the (less familiar) residual connections along D, whose definitions require the choice of a transversal coordinate.
Extensions to singular divisors D are treated in section 8.3 in greater generality than in the literature. If an (automatically locally free) extension to Dreg with logarithmic pole is given, then there exists a unique maximal coherent extension to D. It is locally free only under special circumstances. The case of a normal crossing divisor is discussed in section 8.3, the Gauß–Manin connections for singularities provide other very instructive examples (Theorem 10.3, Theorem 10.7 (b)). In Section 8.4 only some remarks on regular singularities are made.
Logarithmic vector fields and differential forms
For the reader's convenience we put together some definitions and results from [SK4][De1][Ser], which will be useful in sections 8.2 and 8.3.
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- Information
- Frobenius Manifolds and Moduli Spaces for Singularities , pp. 131 - 144Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002