Special vs Essential
Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 15:51 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Compact exceptional curves and divisors on G-Hilb(C^3) correspond to special or essential irreducible representations of G.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that there is a correspondence between the compact exceptional curves and divisors on G-Hilb(C^3) and some non-trivial irreducible representations of G which are special (or essential). Moreover, an explicit construction of the small resolution of G-Hilb(C^3) is given, and using this resolution a correspondence between special and essential representations is constructed. These results extend the special McKay correspondence and Reid's recipe.
What carries the argument
The G-Hilbert scheme G-Hilb(C^3) together with its small resolution, which carries the exceptional curves and divisors matched to the special and essential representations of G.
If this is right
- The exceptional loci in resolutions of quotient singularities C^3/G are classified by special representations.
- Special and essential representations are in bijection via the geometry of the resolved G-Hilbert scheme.
- For any finite G in GL(3,C), the small resolution can be constructed explicitly from the representation data.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This correspondence could be used to compute the cohomology of the resolved space using representation theory.
- It suggests similar extensions might exist for higher-dimensional G-Hilbert schemes.
- For specific groups, one could verify the correspondence by enumerating representations and resolving the scheme directly.
Load-bearing premise
The definitions of special and essential representations from earlier work on the McKay correspondence classify the geometric objects on the G-Hilbert scheme without needing further conditions.
What would settle it
For a concrete finite subgroup G of GL(3,C), such as the cyclic group of order 3, computing the exceptional divisors on the small resolution of G-Hilb(C^3) and checking if they match the special representations would disprove the claim if they do not align.
Figures
read the original abstract
We show a correspondence between the compact exceptional curves and divisors on $G-{\rm Hilb}(\mathbf{C}^3)$ and some non-trivial irreducible representations of $G \subset GL(n,C)$ which are special (or essential). Moreover, we provide an explicit construction of the small resolution of $G-{\rm Hilb}(\mathbf{C}^3)$ and, using this resolution, we construct a correspondence between special and essential representations. These results are an extension of ``Special McKay correspondence'' and ``Reid's recipe''.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper extends the special McKay correspondence and Reid's recipe by establishing a correspondence between the compact exceptional curves and divisors on G-Hilb(C^3) for finite G subset GL(3,C) and certain non-trivial irreducible representations of G that are special or essential. It further supplies an explicit construction of a small resolution of G-Hilb(C^3) and employs this resolution to define a correspondence between special and essential representations.
Significance. If the explicit construction and correspondences are verified, the work would strengthen the geometric side of the special McKay correspondence by making the link between exceptional loci on the G-Hilbert scheme and representation-theoretic data more concrete and computable. The provision of an explicit small resolution is a concrete contribution that could support further explicit calculations in crepant resolutions of three-dimensional quotient singularities.
minor comments (2)
- [Introduction] The introduction would benefit from a brief diagram or table summarizing the new correspondence between curves/divisors and special/essential representations before the detailed proofs.
- [§3 and §4] Notation for the small resolution (e.g., the blow-up centers or the exceptional locus) should be fixed consistently across the construction in §3 and the correspondence statements in §4.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive summary of our work extending the special McKay correspondence and Reid's recipe, including the explicit small resolution of G-Hilb(C^3) and the correspondence between exceptional loci and special/essential representations. The recommendation for minor revision is noted, though no specific major comments were listed in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity identified in the derivation
full rationale
The paper extends the special McKay correspondence by defining correspondences between compact exceptional curves/divisors on G-Hilb(C^3) and special/essential representations of G, while providing an explicit small resolution construction. These build directly on prior definitions of special/essential representations taken from the literature together with standard properties of G-Hilbert schemes and representation theory. No load-bearing step reduces the claimed outputs to the inputs by construction, self-definition, or a self-citation chain; the explicit resolution and new correspondences introduce independent content rather than tautological re-labeling or fitted predictions.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Finite subgroups G of GL(3,C) admit a well-defined G-Hilbert scheme that provides a crepant resolution of the quotient singularity C^3/G.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlexanderDuality.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
We show a correspondence between the compact exceptional curves and divisors on G-Hilb(C^3) and some non-trivial irreducible representations of G which are special (or essential). ... explicit construction of the small resolution of G-Hilb(C^3)
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
T. Bridgeland, A. King and M. Reid,The McKay correspondence as an equivalence of derived categories, J. AMS14(2001), pp. 535–554
work page 2001
-
[2]
Craw,An explicit construction of the McKay correspondence forA-Hilb(C3), J
A. Craw,An explicit construction of the McKay correspondence forA-Hilb(C3), J. Algebra 285(2), (2005), pp. 682–705
work page 2005
-
[3]
A. Craw, Y. Ito, and J. Karmazyn,Multigraded linear series and recollement, Math. Z. 289, (2018), pp. 535–565
work page 2018
-
[4]
A. Craw and M. Reid,How to calculateA-Hilb(C3), Sémin. Congr.6(2002), pp. 129–154
work page 2002
-
[5]
W. Fulton,Introduction to toric varieties, Annals of Mathematics Studies, Vol.131, Prince- ton University Press, 1993
work page 1993
-
[6]
Ishii,On the McKay correspondence for a finite small subgroup ofGL(2,C), J
A. Ishii,On the McKay correspondence for a finite small subgroup ofGL(2,C), J. Reine Angew. Math.549(2002), pp. 221–233
work page 2002
-
[7]
Y. Ito,Survey on crepant resolution and the McKay correspondence in dimension threeto appearintheProceedingsoftheXXIInternationalConferenceonRepresentationsofAlgebras (Shanghai, 2024), the European Mathematical Society
work page 2024
-
[8]
Y. Ito, I. Nakamura,Hilbert schemes and simple singularities, New trends in algebraic geometry (Warwick, 1996), 151-233. London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser., 264 Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999
work page 1996
-
[9]
S. J. Jung,Terminal Quotient Singularities in Dimension Three via Variation of GIT, J. Algebra468(2016), pp. 354–394
work page 2016
-
[10]
Kidoh,Hilbert schemes and cyclic quotient singularities, Hokkaido Mathematical Journal 30(2001), pp
R. Kidoh,Hilbert schemes and cyclic quotient singularities, Hokkaido Mathematical Journal 30(2001), pp. 91–103
work page 2001
-
[11]
Kedzierski,TheG-Hilbert scheme for 1 r (1, a, r−a), Glasgow Math
O. Kedzierski,TheG-Hilbert scheme for 1 r (1, a, r−a), Glasgow Math. J.53(2022), pp. 115–129
work page 2022
-
[12]
McKay,Graphs, singularities and finite groups, Proc
J. McKay,Graphs, singularities and finite groups, Proc. of 1979 Santa Cruz group theory conference, AMS Symposia in Pure Mathematics37(1980), pp. 183—186
work page 1979
-
[13]
Nakamura,Hilbert schemes of abelian group orbits, J Algebraic Geom.10(2001), pp
I. Nakamura,Hilbert schemes of abelian group orbits, J Algebraic Geom.10(2001), pp. 757 –759
work page 2001
-
[14]
T. Oda,Convex bodies and algebraic geometry, An introduction to the theory of toric varieties, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete, 3. Folge, Bb.15, Springer-Verlag, 1988
work page 1988
-
[15]
Reid,Young person’s guide to canonical singularities, In Proc
M. Reid,Young person’s guide to canonical singularities, In Proc. Symp. Pure Math. Vol.46 (1987), pp. 345-414
work page 1987
-
[16]
Reid,McKay correspondence, Proc
M. Reid,McKay correspondence, Proc. of Algebraic Geometry Symposium, Kinosaki, Novem- ber 1996 (1997), pp. 14-41
work page 1996
-
[17]
K. Takahashi,On essential representations in the McKay correspondence forSL(3,C), Mas- ter’s thesis, Nagoya University, 2011
work page 2011
-
[18]
Wunram,Reflexive modules on quotient surface singularities, Math Ann.279(1988), pp
J. Wunram,Reflexive modules on quotient surface singularities, Math Ann.279(1988), pp. 583–598
work page 1988
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.