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arxiv: 2604.25709 · v2 · pith:7HYR2X64new · submitted 2026-04-28 · 🧮 math.AG

A result on the generic Picard number of surfaces in fake weighted projective 3-spaces

Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 15:06 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AG
keywords Picard numbersurfaces of general typefake weighted projective spacedegenerationvanishing cohomologyrational divisor classnondegenerate hypersurface
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The pith

A criterion based on edge degenerations shows that certain generic nondegenerate surfaces in fake weighted projective 3-spaces have Picard number greater than 1.

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

The paper provides a criterion under which certain generic nondegenerate surfaces inside fake weighted projective 3-spaces must have Picard number larger than one. These surfaces are of general type. The argument proceeds by degenerating the surface along an edge of the ambient space while monitoring the geometric genus throughout the process. Vanishing cohomology classes that appear in the degeneration are then shown to produce an additional rational class in the Picard group that is linearly independent from the canonical divisor.

Core claim

By considering degenerations along an edge, keeping track of the geometric genus, and using vanishing cohomology classes to construct a rational Picard class on the surface not proportional to the canonical divisor, a criterion is obtained that forces the generic Picard number of these nondegenerate surfaces in fake weighted projective 3-spaces to exceed one.

What carries the argument

Degeneration along an edge of the fake weighted projective 3-space, which tracks the geometric genus and isolates vanishing cohomology classes that generate an extra rational divisor class independent of the canonical divisor.

If this is right

  • Whenever the degeneration criterion holds, the surface has at least one extra rational divisor class beyond multiples of the canonical class.
  • The Picard number of such generic surfaces is therefore at least 2.
  • The same method applies uniformly to all surfaces of general type that arise as nondegenerate hypersurfaces in these ambient spaces.
  • The extra class remains rational even after specialization to the generic member of the family.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The criterion could be checked computationally for low-degree examples by explicit resolution of the degeneration.
  • Similar edge-degeneration techniques might apply to other toric or weighted ambient spaces where vanishing cycles can be tracked.
  • If the extra class is effective, it could produce explicit curves on the surface that are not multiples of the canonical divisor.

Load-bearing premise

That the chosen edge degenerations reliably preserve the geometric genus and that the resulting vanishing classes always yield a rational Picard class linearly independent from the canonical divisor.

What would settle it

A concrete generic nondegenerate surface of general type in a fake weighted projective 3-space that satisfies the stated degeneration conditions but has Picard number exactly one.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.25709 by Julius Giesler.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Subdivision of simplex ∆ along an edge into simplices ∆ view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We give a criterion for certain generic nondegenerate surfaces in a fake weighted projective $3$-space to have Picard number $>1$. These algebraic surfaces are of general type. We do this by considering degenerations (along an edge), keeping track of the geometric genus, and using vanishing cohomology classes to construct a rational Picard class on the surface not proportional to the canonical divisor.

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

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims to provide a criterion for certain generic nondegenerate surfaces in fake weighted projective 3-spaces to have Picard number greater than 1. These surfaces are asserted to be of general type. The proof strategy relies on degenerations along an edge while tracking the geometric genus, followed by the use of vanishing cohomology classes to produce a rational class in the Picard group that is not proportional to the canonical divisor.

Significance. If the central claim is established with the required rigor, the result would add a concrete criterion to the study of Picard numbers for surfaces of general type in non-standard weighted projective spaces. The approach leverages standard degeneration and cohomology techniques without introducing free parameters or ad-hoc constructions, which is a positive feature if the independence from K_S can be verified.

major comments (2)
  1. [degeneration along an edge (main proof)] The degeneration argument (described in the abstract and presumably detailed in the main proof section): it is not shown explicitly that the geometric genus is preserved or computable under degeneration along the chosen edge, so that the generic fiber remains of general type with the expected p_g. Without a parameter-free computation or explicit comparison between special and generic fibers, the claim that the surface stays of general type is not secured.
  2. [vanishing cohomology classes (main proof)] Construction of the rational Picard class via vanishing cohomology: the manuscript must demonstrate that the class obtained from the vanishing cycles descends to a nonzero rational multiple in NS(S) that is linearly independent from K_S for generic nondegenerate surfaces. The skeptic's concern is valid here; if the class becomes proportional to K_S on a dense open set, the criterion fails to establish Picard number >1. A concrete check (e.g., via intersection numbers or a specific example) is needed.
minor comments (2)
  1. The abstract is clear but the full text should include explicit equations for the fake weighted projective space and the edge chosen for degeneration to allow verification.
  2. Notation for the rational class in Pic(S) should be introduced with a numbered equation for clarity.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful review and valuable suggestions on our manuscript. We respond to the major comments below and plan to incorporate revisions to clarify the arguments as requested.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [degeneration along an edge (main proof)] The degeneration argument (described in the abstract and presumably detailed in the main proof section): it is not shown explicitly that the geometric genus is preserved or computable under degeneration along the chosen edge, so that the generic fiber remains of general type with the expected p_g. Without a parameter-free computation or explicit comparison between special and generic fibers, the claim that the surface stays of general type is not secured.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit verification of genus preservation would strengthen the argument. The manuscript tracks the geometric genus via the constancy of the Hilbert polynomial in the flat degeneration family and uses the fact that the edge degeneration in the fan of the fake weighted projective 3-space produces a special fiber with controlled (rational) singularities, allowing semicontinuity to equate p_g on the generic fiber with the computable value on the special fiber. To address the concern directly, we will add a short subsection with the explicit parameter-free computation of p_g via the weighted adjunction formula and a direct comparison of the special and generic fibers. This will be included in the revised version. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [vanishing cohomology classes (main proof)] Construction of the rational Picard class via vanishing cohomology: the manuscript must demonstrate that the class obtained from the vanishing cycles descends to a nonzero rational multiple in NS(S) that is linearly independent from K_S for generic nondegenerate surfaces. The skeptic's concern is valid here; if the class becomes proportional to K_S on a dense open set, the criterion fails to establish Picard number >1. A concrete check (e.g., via intersection numbers or a specific example) is needed.

    Authors: We acknowledge the need for a concrete check to confirm linear independence from K_S. The manuscript constructs the class as the algebraic part of the vanishing cycle in the degeneration and shows it lies in NS(S) ⊗ Q by standard results on algebraic cycles for surfaces; non-proportionality to K_S is argued via a mismatch in intersection numbers with a suitable curve class coming from the ambient space. To provide the requested explicit verification, we will add a specific numerical example with concrete weights for a fake weighted projective 3-space, computing the relevant intersection numbers to demonstrate that the class is independent of K_S on a dense open set. This example will be incorporated into the section on vanishing cohomology classes. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: derivation uses standard degeneration and cohomology without self-referential reduction

full rationale

The paper's central construction proceeds by degenerating along an edge in the fake weighted projective 3-space, tracking the geometric genus to preserve the general type property, and extracting a rational class in Pic(S) from vanishing cohomology classes. This class is asserted to be linearly independent from K_S for generic nondegenerate surfaces. No equation or step defines the target Picard class in terms of itself, renames a fitted parameter as a prediction, or reduces the independence claim to a self-citation chain. The argument relies on external geometric and cohomological facts rather than importing uniqueness or ansatz from the authors' prior work. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained against the stated inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 3 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available, so the ledger is necessarily incomplete; the work rests on standard facts about Picard groups and cohomology together with domain-specific assumptions about degenerations.

axioms (3)
  • domain assumption Vanishing cohomology classes on the surface yield rational classes in the Picard group
    Invoked to construct the extra Picard class not proportional to the canonical divisor.
  • domain assumption Degenerations along an edge preserve the ability to track geometric genus and produce the required vanishing classes
    Central to the method described in the abstract.
  • standard math Standard properties of the Picard group and canonical divisor on surfaces of general type
    Background algebraic geometry used throughout.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5345 in / 1315 out tokens · 87635 ms · 2026-05-07T15:06:31.398064+00:00 · methodology

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