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arxiv: 2301.10525 · v3 · submitted 2023-01-25 · 🧮 math.SG · math.AG

Symplectomorphisms and spherical objects in the conifold smoothing

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 09:57 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.SG math.AG
keywords conifold smoothingsymplectic mapping class groupspherical objectsderived categorymirror symmetryconifold resolutionaffine A1
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The pith

Mirror symmetry shows the compactly supported mapping class group of the conifold smoothing splits off an infinite-rank free group and classifies spherical objects on the resolution side.

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

The paper examines the conifold smoothing X, a symplectic Weinstein manifold obtained as the complement of a smooth conic in T^*S^3 or as a Hopf-link plumbing of two cotangent bundles, together with its mirror Y, the conifold resolution. It establishes that the compactly supported symplectic mapping class group of X contains an infinite-rank free factor and is therefore infinitely generated. It further classifies all spherical objects in the bounded derived category D(Y) in the three-dimensional affine A_1 setting. A reader would care because these statements give concrete information about the structure of symplectic diffeomorphisms and about objects in derived categories when direct computation on one side is difficult, and they do so by transferring information across mirror symmetry.

Core claim

The compactly supported symplectic mapping class group of the conifold smoothing X splits off a copy of an infinite-rank free group and is therefore infinitely generated; spherical objects in the bounded derived category D(Y) of the conifold resolution are completely classified in the three-dimensional affine A_1 case. Both results are obtained by working on the mirror side of the correspondence between X and Y, building on earlier work of Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda.

What carries the argument

Mirror symmetry between the conifold smoothing X and the conifold resolution Y, which supplies the correspondences used to relate the symplectic mapping class group of X to objects in D(Y).

If this is right

  • The compactly supported symplectic mapping class group of X is infinitely generated.
  • Spherical objects in D(Y) are fully classified in the three-dimensional affine A_1 case.
  • Results about both the mapping class group and the derived category rely on transferring information across the mirror correspondence.
  • The techniques extend prior results of Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda to this specific pair of manifolds.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same mirror-side strategy may produce infinite-generation statements for mapping class groups of other plumbings or conifold-like spaces.
  • The classification of spherical objects could constrain the group of autoequivalences of D(Y) or the space of stability conditions.
  • Direct symplectic constructions on X alone might be insufficient to detect the infinite free factor without the mirror correspondence.

Load-bearing premise

Mirror symmetry between X and Y supplies the correspondences and tools needed to move information about mapping classes on one side to statements about spherical objects on the other.

What would settle it

An explicit relation in the mapping class group of X that would make the free factor finite rank, or an explicit spherical object in D(Y) outside the classified list.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2301.10525 by Ailsa Keating, Ivan Smith.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: The toric compactification of X; blow up the thickened black edges on the cube for P 1×P 1×P 1 . This slices off wedges of the corresponding moment polytope. Two of the four F1-boundary components of the result have been shaded. Lemma 3.5. X is symplectically equivalent to the symplectic completion of X\D. Proof. In an affine chart Cp × Cq × C ∗ z we blow up {p = 1 = z} and {q = 1 = −z}. Taking [λ, µ] ∈ P … view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Lagrangian matching spheres Si (with matching paths γi) and Lagrangian discs Li (see Theorem 5.1). Suppose we are given an embedded S 1 ⊂ C ∗\{−1, 1} in the base of the Morse-Bott-Lefschetz fibration, avoiding the critical values. By similar considerations to those in Lemmas 3.1 and 3.2, parallel transporting the T 2 vanishing cycle about the S 1 gives a Lagrangian T 3 . This T 3 will be exact precisely wh… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: for an illustration [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p011_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: The generators for PBr3 Quotienting by the center, we get isomorphisms PBr3 ≃ PBr3 /Z(PBr3) × Z(PBr3) ≃ (Z ∗ Z) × Z. This decomposition as a direct product of groups is of course not unique: for instance we could have (Z⟨Ri⟩ ∗ Z⟨Rj ⟩) × Z⟨R1R2R3⟩ for any i ̸= j. Given any matching path γ between −1 and +1 in C ∗ , consider the full twist tγ ∈ PBr3. We want to characterise the subgroup generated by these tw… view at source ↗
Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: and Theorem 1.2] [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p019_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Matching spheres in (X, ωa,b) and flux values for the vanishing tori (with respect to the upper half plane). S1 is in grey in each diagram to visualise intersection points. a Z-torsor of gradings, and the twist τSi shifts the grading on Si by 2; as they are disjoint, it does not change the grading on any Sj for i ̸= j. Finally, as the forgetful map from Sympgr c (X, ωa,b) to gradeable compactly supported s… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Let $X$ denote the `conifold smoothing', the symplectic Weinstein manifold which is the complement of a smooth conic in $T^*S^3$, or equivalently the plumbing of two copies of $T^*S^3$ along a Hopf link. Let $Y$ denote the `conifold resolution', by which we mean the complement of a smooth divisor in $\mathcal{O}(-1) \oplus \mathcal{O}(-1) \to \mathbb{P}^1$. We prove that the compactly supported symplectic mapping class group of $X$ splits off a copy of an infinite rank free group, in particular is infinitely generated; and we classify spherical objects in the bounded derived category $D(Y)$ (the three-dimensional `affine $A_1$-case'). Our results build on work of Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda, and both theorems make essential use of working on the `other side' of the mirror.

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

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper considers the conifold smoothing X (symplectic Weinstein manifold, complement of a smooth conic in T^*S^3 or plumbing of two T^*S^3 along a Hopf link) and its mirror the conifold resolution Y (complement of a smooth divisor in O(-1)⊕O(-1)→P^1). It proves that the compactly supported symplectic mapping class group of X splits off an infinite-rank free group (hence is infinitely generated) and classifies spherical objects in the bounded derived category D(Y) (the 3-dimensional affine A1 case). Both results build on Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda and rely on homological mirror symmetry by working on the opposite side of the mirror.

Significance. If the results hold, they furnish a concrete example of an infinitely generated compactly supported symplectic mapping class group for a specific Weinstein manifold and a classification of spherical objects in D(Y), advancing the study of mapping class groups and derived categories via mirror symmetry in this low-dimensional case.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract: both main theorems are stated to 'make essential use of working on the other side of the mirror,' yet the manuscript provides no explicit description of the homological mirror symmetry equivalence functor (building on Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda), no verification of its faithfulness or fullness on the relevant subgroups of symplectomorphisms and autoequivalences, and no direct construction of the infinite-rank free-group generators that survives the correspondence. This renders the splitting statement for the mapping class group of X and the completeness of the spherical-object classification in D(Y) dependent on an unverified transfer step.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Introduction] Clarify the precise statements of the two main theorems (e.g., which subgroup splits off the free group, and the exact list of spherical objects up to isomorphism) in the introduction before invoking mirror symmetry.
  2. Ensure all references to prior results of Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda are accompanied by page or theorem numbers when the present arguments invoke them.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for identifying this point of clarification. We respond to the major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: both main theorems are stated to 'make essential use of working on the other side of the mirror,' yet the manuscript provides no explicit description of the homological mirror symmetry equivalence functor (building on Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda), no verification of its faithfulness or fullness on the relevant subgroups of symplectomorphisms and autoequivalences, and no direct construction of the infinite-rank free-group generators that survives the correspondence. This renders the splitting statement for the mapping class group of X and the completeness of the spherical-object classification in D(Y) dependent on an unverified transfer step.

    Authors: The homological mirror symmetry equivalence is taken from Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda, where an explicit functor is constructed between the wrapped Fukaya category of the conifold smoothing X and the derived category of the resolution Y. Our results apply this equivalence to transfer the classification of spherical objects (from Toda on the Y side) and the infinite-rank free subgroup of autoequivalences to the corresponding statement for compactly supported symplectomorphisms of X. While the manuscript does not reprove the full HMS, it invokes specific properties of the functor (e.g., its action on spherical objects and Dehn-twist generators) that are established in the cited work. To address the concern, we will revise the introduction to include a dedicated paragraph outlining the relevant functor components from Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and the propositions ensuring that the free-group generators and spherical-object classification survive the correspondence. This makes the transfer step explicit without requiring a new proof of faithfulness on the entire groups. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: results rely on external prior work with non-overlapping authors

full rationale

The abstract states that results build on Chan-Pomerleano-Ueda and Toda (non-overlapping authors) and use mirror symmetry as an established tool between X and Y. No self-citations, self-definitional steps, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or uniqueness theorems imported from the present authors appear. The derivation chain is presented as depending on independent external correspondences rather than reducing to its own inputs by construction. This is the normal case of a paper that is not circular.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper rests on the standard axioms of symplectic geometry, Weinstein manifolds, and derived categories of coherent sheaves, together with the established mirror symmetry correspondence between X and Y; no new free parameters, ad-hoc axioms, or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Standard axioms and definitions of symplectic geometry, Weinstein manifolds, and bounded derived categories of coherent sheaves
    The statements about X, Y, mapping class groups, and spherical objects presuppose these established frameworks.
  • domain assumption Mirror symmetry supplies usable correspondences between the symplectic side X and the algebraic side Y
    The abstract states that both theorems make essential use of working on the other side of the mirror.

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