Author
Doran, B
Kirwan, F
Journal title
Modern Geometry — A celebration of the work of Simon Donaldson
Volume
99
Last updated
2024-04-07T09:22:23.08+01:00
Page
1-22
Abstract
<p>When the action of a reductive group on a projective variety has a suitable linearisation, Mumford's geometric invariant theory (GIT) can be used to construct and study an associated quotient variety. In this article we describe how Mumford's GIT can be extended effectively to suitable actions of linear algebraic groups which are not necessarily reductive, with the extra data of a graded linearisation for the action. Any linearisation in the traditional sense for a reductive group action induces a graded linearisation in a natural way.</p> <br/> <p>The classical examples of moduli spaces which can be constructed using Mumford's GIT are moduli spaces of stable curves and of (semi)stable bundles over a fixed nonsingular curve. This more general construction can be used to construct moduli spaces of unstable objects, such as unstable curves or unstable bundles (with suitable fixed discrete invariants in each case, related to their singularities or Harder{Narasimhan type).</p>
Symplectic ID
713448
Favourite
Off
Publication type
Conference Paper
Publication date
05 Sep 2018
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 11 Aug 2017 - 15:31.