Deformations of some local Calabi-Yau manifolds
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 11:28 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Deformations of crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities provide partial results toward classifying canonical threefold singularities.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
After a general discussion of the deformation theory, the authors specialize to dimension three and consider examples of good (log) resolutions as well as small resolutions, obtaining partial results on the classification of canonical threefold singularities that admit good crepant resolutions. They also study a noncrepant example, the blowup of a small resolution whose exceptional set is a smooth curve.
What carries the argument
The deformation theory of crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities, applied to threefolds.
If this is right
- Canonical threefold singularities that admit good crepant resolutions can be partially classified through their deformation behavior.
- Both good log resolutions and small resolutions provide examples where deformations can be explicitly studied.
- The deformation theory applies to local Calabi-Yau manifolds arising from these resolutions.
- Noncrepant resolutions, such as blowups of small resolutions with smooth curve exceptional sets, exhibit different behavior.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the partial classification holds more broadly, it could guide searches for resolutions in higher dimensions or other singularity types.
- Connections to mirror symmetry might arise if these local deformations correspond to global Calabi-Yau properties, though this is not explored in the paper.
- Testing the results on explicit examples like quotient singularities could verify or extend the classification.
Load-bearing premise
The singularities considered are isolated rational Gorenstein singularities with crepant resolutions that are either good log resolutions or small resolutions.
What would settle it
Finding a canonical threefold singularity that admits a good crepant resolution but falls outside the partial classification obtained, or showing that a deformation of such a resolution does not preserve the crepant property.
read the original abstract
We study deformations of certain crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities. After a general discussion of the deformation theory, we specialize to dimension $3$ and consider examples which are good (log) resolutions as well as the case of small resolutions. We obtain some partial results on the classification of canonical threefold singularities that admit good crepant resolutions. Finally, we study a noncrepant example, the blowup of a small resolution whose exceptional set is a smooth curve.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript studies deformations of crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities. After a general discussion of the deformation theory, it specializes to dimension 3 and treats explicit examples of good (log) resolutions as well as small resolutions. Partial results are derived on the classification of canonical threefold singularities admitting good crepant resolutions. A non-crepant example—the blowup of a small resolution whose exceptional set is a smooth curve—is also examined.
Significance. The work supplies concrete deformation-theoretic examples that advance the partial classification of canonical threefold singularities with good crepant resolutions. The incremental, example-driven approach is proportionate to the stated claims and may serve as a reference for subsequent studies of local Calabi-Yau threefolds.
minor comments (3)
- [§3] The transition from the general deformation discussion to the threefold examples would benefit from an explicit statement of which deformation functors are being used in each case (e.g., Def_X or Def_{X/Y}).
- [final section] In the non-crepant example, the statement that the blowup remains a local Calabi-Yau manifold after deformation should be accompanied by a brief verification that the canonical class remains trivial.
- [throughout] Several references to prior work on crepant resolutions of Gorenstein singularities are cited only by author name; full bibliographic details should be supplied.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript, including the summary of its contributions to deformation theory of crepant resolutions and the partial classification results, as well as the recommendation for minor revision. No specific major comments are provided in the report.
Circularity Check
No circularity; derivation is self-contained
full rationale
This is a pure mathematics paper in algebraic geometry studying deformations of crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities, with a focus on dimension 3 examples (good log resolutions and small resolutions) leading to partial classification results. The argument proceeds via standard deformation theory followed by explicit case analysis, without any reduction of claims to self-definitions, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations that substitute for independent verification. No uniqueness theorems or ansatzes are smuggled in via author-overlapping citations, and the incremental, example-driven nature keeps the chain independent of the target results. The paper is self-contained against external benchmarks in deformation theory.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Deformation theory applies in the expected way to crepant resolutions of isolated rational Gorenstein singularities.
discussion (0)
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