In mathematics, specifically in algebraic geometry and algebraic topology, the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem is a precise statement of certain relations between the shape of an algebraic variety and the shape of its subvarieties. More precisely, the theorem says that for a variety X embedded in projective space and a hyperplane section Y, the homology, cohomology, and homotopy groups of X determine those of Y. A result of this kind was first stated by Solomon Lefschetz for homology groups of complex algebraic varieties. Similar results have since been found for homotopy groups, in positive characteristic, and in other homology and cohomology theories.
A far-reaching generalization of the hard Lefschetz theorem is given by the decomposition theorem.
Let
X
n
CPN
Y
X
U=X\setminusY
Hk(Y,Z) → Hk(X,Z)
k<n-1
k=n-1
Hk(X,Z) → Hk(Y,Z)
k<n-1
k=n-1
\pik(Y,Z) → \pik(X,Z)
k<n-1
k=n-1
Hk(X,Y;Z)
k\leqn-1
Hk(X,Y;Z)
k\leqn-1
\pik(X,Y)
k\leqn-1
Solomon Lefschetz used his idea of a Lefschetz pencil to prove the theorem. Rather than considering the hyperplane section
Y
Yt
Y=Y0
Yt
t
Yt
t
X
X
Aldo Andreotti and Theodore Frankel recognized that Lefschetz's theorem could be recast using Morse theory. Here the parameter
t
n
2n
n
Y
X
n
Neither Lefschetz's proof nor Andreotti and Frankel's proof directly imply the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem for homotopy groups. An approach that does was found by René Thom no later than 1957 and was simplified and published by Raoul Bott in 1959. Thom and Bott interpret
Y
X
X
Y
n
Y
X
n
Kunihiko Kodaira and Donald C. Spencer found that under certain restrictions, it is possible to prove a Lefschetz-type theorem for the Hodge groups
Hp,q
Y
l{O}X(Y)
Hp,q(X)\toHp,q(Y)
p+q<n-1
p+q=n-1
Hq(X,
p\Omega | |
stylewedge | |
X) |
Hq(Y,
p\Omega | |
stylewedge | |
Y) |
Hq(X,
p\Omega | |
stylewedge | |
X| |
Y)
Combining this proof with the universal coefficient theorem nearly yields the usual Lefschetz theorem for cohomology with coefficients in any field of characteristic zero. It is, however, slightly weaker because of the additional assumptions on
Y
Michael Artin and Alexander Grothendieck found a generalization of the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem to the case where the coefficients of the cohomology lie not in a field but instead in a constructible sheaf. They prove that for a constructible sheaf
l{F}
U
Hk(U,l{F})
k>n
The motivation behind Artin and Grothendieck's proof for constructible sheaves was to give a proof that could be adapted to the setting of étale and
\ell
The theorem can also be generalized to intersection homology. In this setting, the theorem holds for highly singular spaces.
A Lefschetz-type theorem also holds for Picard groups.
See also: Lefschetz manifold.
Let
X
n
CPN
X
k
Hn(X)
Hn(X)
This is the hard Lefschetz theorem, christened in French by Grothendieck more colloquially as the Théorème de Lefschetz vache. It immediately implies the injectivity part of the Lefschetz hyperplane theorem.
The hard Lefschetz theorem in fact holds for any compact Kähler manifold, with the isomorphism in de Rham cohomology given by multiplication by a power of the class of the Kähler form. It can fail for non-Kähler manifolds: for example, Hopf surfaces have vanishing second cohomology groups, so there is no analogue of the second cohomology class of a hyperplane section.
The hard Lefschetz theorem was proven for \ell