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arxiv: 2303.05030 · v5 · pith:UX55NSNNnew · submitted 2023-03-09 · 🧮 math.AG

Grothendieck's period conjecture for Kummer surfaces of self-product CM type

Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 09:32 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AG
keywords Grothendieck period conjectureKummer surfaceCM elliptic curvemotivic periodsTannakian categorymotivated cyclesalgebraic cycles
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The pith

The Grothendieck period conjecture holds for the Kummer surface of a square of a CM elliptic curve.

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

The paper establishes that for this particular Kummer surface the period isomorphism is dense inside the torsor of motivic periods. It also shows that every motivated cohomology class on any power of the surface is algebraic. The argument works even though the motive carries a nontrivial transcendental part, because that motive still sits inside the Tannakian category generated by the motive of the underlying CM elliptic curve. A reader cares because the result supplies an explicit geometric case in which a long-standing conjecture on periods and algebraic cycles is verified.

Core claim

The Grothendieck period conjecture holds for the Kummer surface associated with the square of a CM elliptic curve. This means that the period isomorphism is dense in the torsor of motivic periods. In other words, the isomorphism is dense in the torsor of motivated periods, and motivated classes on powers of the surface are algebraic. The point is that the motive has a non-trivial transcendental part, but belongs to the Tannakian category generated by the motive of a CM elliptic curve.

What carries the argument

The Tannakian category generated by the motive of a CM elliptic curve, which contains the motive of the Kummer surface and thereby forces motivated classes to be algebraic.

If this is right

  • Motivated classes on all powers of the surface are algebraic.
  • The period map realizes a dense subset of the motivic period torsor.
  • The result extends the known cases of the conjecture to surfaces whose motives are transcendental yet CM-generated.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • Similar density statements might hold for other Kummer surfaces whose motives are built from CM abelian varieties of higher dimension.
  • The same Tannakian containment could be used to study the Hodge conjecture for these surfaces.
  • One could test whether the density persists after base change to fields where the CM elliptic curve acquires extra endomorphisms.

Load-bearing premise

The motive of the Kummer surface lies inside the Tannakian category generated by the motive of the CM elliptic curve.

What would settle it

Exhibiting a motivated but non-algebraic cohomology class on some power of the Kummer surface would show the claim is false.

read the original abstract

We show that the Grothendieck period conjecture holds for the Kummer surface associated with the square of a CM elliptic curve. This means that the period isomorphism is dense in the torsor of motivic periods. In other words, the isomorphism is dense in the torsor of motivated periods, and motivated classes on powers of the surface are algebraic. The point is that the motive has a non-trivial transcendental part, but belongs to the Tannakian category generated by the motive of a CM elliptic curve.

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 / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript proves that Grothendieck's period conjecture holds for the Kummer surface associated to the square of a CM elliptic curve. It establishes that the period isomorphism is dense in the torsor of motivic periods (equivalently, in the torsor of motivated periods), so that motivated classes on powers of the surface are algebraic. The key reduction is that the motive of the surface, although possessing a non-trivial transcendental part, lies in the Tannakian category generated by the motive of the CM elliptic curve.

Significance. If the central reduction is correct, the result supplies a concrete higher-dimensional example in which the period conjecture holds for a motive with transcendental components that nevertheless belongs to a Tannakian category generated by an elliptic curve. This strengthens the body of verified cases and illustrates how the conjecture can be approached via Tannakian generation even when the motive is not purely of CM elliptic type.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation to accept the manuscript.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity detected

full rationale

The provided abstract and context present the central reduction—that the Kummer surface motive belongs to the Tannakian category generated by a CM elliptic curve motive—as an enabling mathematical fact used to deduce density of the period isomorphism and algebraicity of motivated classes. No self-definitional steps, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, load-bearing self-citations, or ansatz smuggling are exhibited in the given text; the derivation chain appears self-contained against external motivic and period conjectures rather than reducing to its own inputs by construction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The result rests on the assumption that the motive lies in the Tannakian category of a CM elliptic curve motive; no free parameters or invented entities are mentioned.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The motive of the Kummer surface belongs to the Tannakian category generated by the motive of a CM elliptic curve.
    Explicitly identified in the abstract as the enabling point that allows reduction despite the presence of a transcendental part.

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