In algebraic geometry, the Iitaka dimension of a line bundle L on an algebraic variety X is the dimension of the image of the rational map to projective space determined by L. This is 1 less than the dimension of the section ring of L
R(X,L)=
infty | |
oplus | |
d=0 |
H0(X,L ⊗ ).
-infty
A line bundle is big if it is of maximal Iitaka dimension, that is, if its Iitaka dimension is equal to the dimension of the underlying variety. Bigness is a birational invariant: If is a birational morphism of varieties, and if L is a big line bundle on X, then f*L is a big line bundle on Y.
All ample line bundles are big.
Big line bundles need not determine birational isomorphisms of X with its image. For example, if C is a hyperelliptic curve (such as a curve of genus two), then its canonical bundle is big, but the rational map it determines is not a birational isomorphism. Instead, it is a two-to-one cover of the canonical curve of C, which is a rational normal curve.
See main article: Kodaira dimension. The Iitaka dimension of the canonical bundle of a smooth variety is called its Kodaira dimension.
Consider on complex algebraic varieties in the following.
Let K be the canonical bundle on M. The dimension of H0(M,Km), holomorphic sections of Km, is denoted by Pm(M), called m-genus. Let
N(M)=\{m\ge1|Pm(M)\ge1\},
m\inN(M)
\PhimK
\begin{align} \PhimK:&M\longrightarrow PN\\ &z \mapsto (\varphi0(z):\varphi1(z): … :\varphiN(z))\end{align}
\varphii
\PhimK
\PhimK(M)
PN
For certain
m
\Phimk:M → W=\PhimK(M)\subsetPN
In the case of surfaces with κ(M)=1 the above W is replaced by a curve C, which is an elliptic curve (κ(C)=0). We want to extend this fact to the general dimension and obtain the analytic fiber structure depicted in the upper right figure.
Given a birational map
\varphi:M\longrightarrowW
\PhimK(M)=\PhimK(W)
It is shown by Iitaka that given n-dimensional compact complex manifold M with its Kodaira dimension κ(M) satisfying 1 ≤ κ(M) ≤ n-1, there are enough large m1,m2 such that
\Phi | |
m1K |
:M\longrightarrow
W | |
m1 |
(M)
\Phi | |
m2K |
:M\longrightarrow
W | |
m2 |
(M)
\varphi:W | |
m1 |
\longrightarrow
W | |
m2 |
(M)
Furthermore, one can select
M*
M
W*
W | |
m1 |
W | |
m1 |
\Phi:M*\longrightarrowW*
\Phi
\Phi
* | |
M | |
w:= |
\Phi-1(w), w\inW*
The above fiber structure is called the Iitaka fiber space. In the case of the surface S (n = 2 = dim(S)), W* is the algebraic curve, the fiber structure is of dimension 1, and then the general fibers have the Kodaira dimension 0 i.e. elliptic curve. Therefore, S is the elliptic surface. These fact can be generalized to the general n. Therefore The study of the higher-dimensional birational geometry decompose to the part of κ=-∞,0,n and the fiber space whose fibers is of κ=0.
The following additional formula by Iitaka, called Iitaka conjecture, is important for the classification of algebraic varieties or compact complex manifolds.
This conjecture has been only partly solved, for example in the case of Moishezon manifolds. The classification theory might been said to be the effort to solve the Iitaka conjecture and lead another theorems that the three-dimensional variety V is abelian if and only if κ(V)=0 and q(V)=3 and its generalization so on. The minimal model program might be led from this conjecture.