Automorphism Groups of K3 surfaces
A complex K3 surface is a compact complex surface $X$ with vanishing irregularity $h^1(X, \mathcal{O}_X)=0$ and trivial canonical bundle $\mathcal{O}_X\cong \omega_X$.
Much of the theory of (complex) K3 surfaces is governed by its Hodge structure and the $\mathbb{Z}$-lattices $NS(X) \subseteq H^2(X, \mathbb{Z})$.
See Daniel Huybrechts (2016) for the theory of K3 surfaces.
Automorphisms
K3_surface_automorphism_group — MethodK3_surface_automorphism_group(S::ZZLat [, ample_class]) -> generators, rational curves, chambersCompute the automorphism group of a very-general $S$-polarized K3 surface.
Further return representatives of the $\mathrm{Aut}(X)$-orbits of (-2)-curves on X and a fundamental domain for the action of $\mathrm{Aut}(X)$ on the set of nef L|S chambers. This is almost a fundamental domain for $\mathrm{Aut}(X)$ on the nef cone.
Here very general means that $Num(X)$ is isomorphic to S and the image of $\mathrm{Aut}(X) \to H^0(X,\Omega^2_X)$ is $ \pm 1$.
The function returns generators for the image of
\[f\colon \mathrm{Aut}(X) \to O(Num(X))\]
The output is represented with respect to the basis of S.
Note that under our genericity assumptions the kernel of $f$ is of order at most $2$ and it is equal to $2$ if and only if $S$ is $2$-elementary. If an ample class is given, then the generators returned preserve it.
This kind of computation can be very expensive. To print progress information use set_verbose_level(:K3Auto, 2) or higher.
Input
S: a hyperbolic latticeample: a row matrix or a vector given with respect to the ambient space of S.
borcherds_method — Functionborcherds_method(S::ZZLat, n::Integer; compute_OR=true, entropy_abort=false, max_nchambers=-1)
borcherds_method(L::ZZLat, S::ZZLat, w::QQMatrix; compute_OR=true, entropy_abort=false, max_nchambers=-1)Compute the symmetry group of a Weyl chamber up to finite index.
Arguments
w: initial Weyl row vector represented with respect to the basis ofL;L: even, unimodular, hyperbolic lattice of rank n=10,18 or 26;S: a primitive sublattice ofL;compute_OR=true: if false take asGall isometries ofSextending toL;max_nchambers: break the computation aftermax_nchambersare found;entropy_abortabort if an automorphism of positive entropy is found.
K3Chamber — TypeK3ChamberThe $L|S$ chamber induced from a Weyl vector in L.
Let $L$ be an even, unimodular and hyperbolic lattice of rank $10$, $18$ or $26$ and $S$ be a primitive sublattice. Any Weyl vector $w$ of $L$ defines a Weyl chamber $C(w)$ in the positive cone of $L$. The Weyl chamber is a rational locally polyhedral cone with infinitely many facets, i.e. walls. It is the intersection of the positive half-spaces defined by $\Delta_L(w) = \{r \in L | r^2=-2, r.w = 1\}$. We have
\[C(w)=\{x \in \mathcal{P}_L | \forall r \in \Delta_L(w): x.r \geq 0\}\]
The Weyl chamber is a fundamental domain for the action of the Weyl group on the positive cone. We say that $S \otimes \mathbb{R} \cap C(w)$ is the $L|S$-chamber induced by $w$.
Note that two Weyl vectors induce the same chamber if and only if their orthogonal projections to $S$ coincide.
chamber — Functionchamber(data::BorcherdsCtx, weyl_vector::ZZMatrix, [parent_wall::ZZMatrix, walls::Vector{ZZMatrix}])Return the $L|S$-chamber with the given Weyl vector.
The lattices $L$ and $S$ are stored in data. Via the parent walls we can obtain a spanning tree of the chamber graph.
weyl_vector — Methodweyl_vector(D::K3Chamber) -> ZZMatrixReturn the Weyl vector defining this chamber.
walls — Methodwalls(D::K3Chamber) -> Vector{ZZMatrix}Return the walls of the chamber D, i.e. its facets.
The corresponding half space of the wall defined by v in walls(D) is
\[\{x \in S \otimes \mathbb{R} | \langle x,v \rangle \geq 0\}.\]
v is given with respect to the basis of S and is primitive in S.
Note that Ichiro Shimada (2015) follows a different convention and takes v primitive in S^\vee.
inner_point — Methodinner_point(L::ZZLat, S::ZZLat, w::QQMatrix)
inner_point(C::K3Chamber)Return a reasonably small integer inner point of the given L|S chamber.
rays — Methodrays(D::K3Chamber)Return the rays of the chamber D.
They are represented as primitive row vectors with respect to the basis of S.
aut — Methodaut(E::K3Chamber) -> Vector{ZZMatrix}Return the stabilizer $\mathrm{Aut}_G(E)$ of $E$ in $G$.
The elements are represented with respect to the basis of $S$.
hom — Methodhom(D::K3Chamber, E::K3Chamber) -> Vector{ZZMatrix}Return the set $\mathrm{Hom}_G(D, E)$ of elements of $G$ mapping D to E.
The elements are represented with respect to the basis of $S$.
adjacent_chamber — Methodadjacent_chamber(D::K3Chamber, v::ZZMatrix) -> K3ChamberReturn return the $L|S$ chamber adjacent to D via the wall defined by v.
separating_hyperplanes — Methodseparating_hyperplanes(S::ZZLat, v::QQMatrix, h::QQMatrix, d)Return $\{x \in S | x^2=d, x.v>0, x.h<0\}$.
Arguments
S: a hyperbolic latticed: a negative integerv,h: vectors of positive square
has_zero_entropy — Functionhas_zero_entropy(S::ZZLat; rank_unimod=26) ->Compute if the symmetry group of a Weyl chamber is elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic.
Output
1- elliptic – the symmetry group is finite0- parabolic – there is a unique cusp with infinite stabilizer-1- hyperbolic – positive entropy
This calls borcherds_method and breaks the computation as soon as a symmetry of a Weyl chamber with positive entrop is found.
Contact
Please direct questions about this part of OSCAR to the following people:
You can ask questions in the OSCAR Slack.
Alternatively, you can raise an issue on github.