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arxiv: 1906.10911 · v1 · pith:MXHUULWAnew · submitted 2019-06-26 · 🧮 math.AG

A note on flatness of some fiber type contractions

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 15:35 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AG
keywords flatnessfiber type contractionsconic bundlesprojective varietiesmild singularitiesalgebraic geometrymorphisms
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The pith

Flatness of morphisms with one-dimensional fibers relates directly to their conic bundle structures.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper investigates the flatness of fiber type contractions on complex projective varieties of any dimension. It shows how this flatness connects to the morphism possessing a conic bundle structure. The discussion includes cases where the varieties have only mild singularities instead of being completely smooth. This connection provides a way to understand when such contractions are flat. Sympathetic readers would care because flatness is a basic property in algebraic geometry that affects many other behaviors of the morphism.

Core claim

The flatness property of fiber type contractions with one-dimensional fibers is related to the morphisms admitting conic bundle structures. This holds for smooth projective varieties and extends to those with mild singularities.

What carries the argument

conic bundle structures on the morphisms

Load-bearing premise

The morphisms under study admit conic bundle structures and the varieties are complex projective with at most mild singularities.

What would settle it

A counterexample would be a morphism with one-dimensional fibers that has a conic bundle structure but fails to be flat, or one that is flat without such a structure.

read the original abstract

We discuss the flatness property of some fiber type contractions of complex smooth projective varieties of arbitrary dimensions. We relate the flatness of some morphisms having one-dimensional fibers with their conic bundles structures, also in the general case in which some mild singularities of the varieties are admitted.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript discusses the flatness property of fiber type contractions of complex smooth projective varieties of arbitrary dimensions. It relates the flatness of morphisms having one-dimensional fibers with their conic bundle structures, extending the discussion to the case of varieties admitting mild singularities.

Significance. If the claimed relations hold, the note supplies a criterion connecting flatness of certain fiber-type contractions to the existence of conic bundle structures. This may be of use in the study of extremal contractions and the geometry of higher-dimensional varieties, with the extension to mild singularities increasing the range of applicability beyond the smooth case.

minor comments (2)
  1. The abstract refers to 'some mild singularities' without naming them; the introduction or §2 should list the precise classes (e.g., terminal, canonical, or Q-factorial) under which the statements are proved.
  2. Notation for the base and the relative Picard number is introduced late; a short preliminary subsection collecting the standing assumptions on the morphism f : X → Y would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript and the recommendation for minor revision. No major comments were provided in the report.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The paper's central claim relates flatness of fiber-type contractions (with 1-dimensional fibers) to conic bundle structures on smooth projective varieties (or those with mild singularities). No derivation step reduces by construction to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain; the relation is presented as a geometric observation supported by standard properties of morphisms and varieties. The provided abstract and context contain no equations or arguments that equate outputs to inputs via renaming or ansatz smuggling. This is a standard non-circular result in algebraic geometry.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are identifiable from the abstract alone.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5550 in / 830 out tokens · 20694 ms · 2026-05-25T15:35:58.709711+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

11 extracted references · 11 canonical work pages · 1 internal anchor

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