In mathematics, Schubert calculus[1] is a branch of algebraic geometry introduced in the nineteenth century by Hermann Schubert in order to solve various counting problems of projective geometry and, as such, is viewed as part of enumerative geometry. Giving it a more rigorous foundation was the aim of Hilbert's 15th problem. It is related to several more modern concepts, such as characteristic classes, and both its algorithmic aspects and applications remain of current interest. The term Schubert calculus is sometimes used to mean the enumerative geometry of linear subspaces of a vector space, which is roughly equivalent to describing the cohomology ring of Grassmannians. Sometimes it is used to mean the more general enumerative geometry of algebraic varieties that are homogenous spaces of simple Lie groups. Even more generally, Schubert calculus is sometimes understood as encompassing the study of analogous questions in generalized cohomology theories.
The objects introduced by Schubert are the Schubert cells,[2] which are locally closed sets in a Grassmannian defined by conditions of incidence of a linear subspace in projective space with a given flag. For further details see Schubert variety.
The intersection theory[3] of these cells, which can be seen as the product structure in the cohomology ring of the Grassmannian, consisting of associated cohomology classes, allows
in particular the determination of cases in which the intersections of cells results in a finite set of points. A key result is that the Schubert cells (or rather, the classes of their Zariski closures, the Schubert cycles or Schubert varieties) span the whole cohomology ring.
Schubert calculus can be constructed using the Chow ring[3] of the Grassmannian, where the generating cycles are represented by geometrically defined data.[4] Denote the Grassmannian of -planes in a fixed -dimensional vector space as , and its Chow ring as . (Note that the Grassmannian is sometimes denoted if the vector space isn't explicitly given or as if the ambient space and its -dimensional subspaces are replaced by their projectizations.) Choosing an (arbitrary) complete flag
to each weakly decreasing -tuple of integers , where
which is used when considering cellular homology instead of the Chow ring. The latter are disjoint affine spaces, of dimension , whose union is .
An equivalent characterization of the Schubert cell may be given in terms of the dual complete flag
where
Then consists of those -dimensional subspaces that have a basis
consisting of elements
of the subspaces
Since the homology class , called a Schubert class, does not depend on the choice of complete flag , it can be written as
It can be shown that these classes are linearly independent and generate the Chow ring as their linear span. The associated intersection theory is called Schubert calculus. For a given sequence with the Schubert class is usually just denoted . The Schubert classes given by a single integer , (i.e., a horizontal partition), are called special classes. Using the Giambelli formula below, all the Schubert classes can be generated from these special classes.
In some sources,[1][2] the Schubert cells and Schubert varieties are labelled differently, as and , respectively, where is the complementary partition to with parts
,
whose Young diagram is the complement of the one for within the rectangular one (reversed, both horizontally and vertically).
Another labelling convention for and is and
, respectively, where
is the multi-index defined by
The integers are the pivot locations of the representations of elements of in reduced matricial echelon form.
In order to explain the definition, consider a generic -plane . It will have only a zero intersection with for , whereas
for
For example, in , a -plane is the solution space of a system of five independent homogeneous linear equations. These equations will generically span when restricted to a subspace with , in which case the solution space (the intersection of with ) will consist only of the zero vector. However, if , and will necessarily have nonzero intersection. For example, the expected dimension of intersection of and is , the intersection of and has expected dimension , and so on.
The definition of a Schubert variety states that the first value of with is generically smaller than the expected value by the parameter . The -planes given by these constraints then define special subvarieties of .[4]
A Schubert variety has dimension equal to the weight
of the partition .
Alternatively, in the notational convention indicated above, its codimension in is the weight
of the complementary partition in the dimensional rectangular Young diagram.
This is stable under inclusions of Grassmannians.
That is, the inclusion
defined, for , by
has the property
and the inclusion
defined by adding the extra basis element to each -plane, giving a -plane,
does as well
Thus, if and are a cell and a subvariety in the Grassmannian , they may also be viewed as a cell and a subvariety within the Grassmannian for
any pair with and
.
In the special case , there is an explicit formula of the product of with an arbitrary Schubert class given by
where , are the weights of the partitions. This is called the Pieri formula, and can be used to determine the intersection product of any two Schubert classes when combined with the Giambelli formula. For example,
There is an easy description of the cohomology ring, or the Chow ring, of the Grassmannian using the Chern classes of two natural vector bundles over . We have the exact sequence of vector bundles over
where is the tautological bundle whose fiber, over any element is the subspace itself, is the trivial vector bundle of rank , with as fiber and is the quotient vector bundle of rank , with as fiber. The Chern classes of the bundles and are
where is the partition whose Young diagram consists of a single column of length and
The tautological sequence then gives the presentation of the Chow ring as
One of the classical examples analyzed is the Grassmannian since it parameterizes lines in . Using the Chow ring , Schubert calculus can be used to compute the number of lines on a cubic surface.[4]
Recall that a line in gives a dimension subspace of , hence an element of . Also, the equation of a line can be given as a section of . Since a cubic surface is given as a generic homogeneous cubic polynomial, this is given as a generic section . A line is a subvariety of if and only if the section vanishes on . Therefore, the Euler class of can be integrated over to get the number of points where the generic section vanishes on . In order to get the Euler class, the total Chern class of must be computed, which is given as
The splitting formula then reads as the formal equation
where and for formal line bundles . The splitting equation gives the relations
and .
Since can be viewed as the direct sum of formal line bundles
^ abcdFulton, William (1997). Young Tableaux. With Applications to Representation Theory and Geometry, Chapt. 9.4. London Mathematical Society Student Texts. Vol. 35. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511626241. ISBN9780521567244.
^Fulton, William (1997). Young Tableaux. With Applications to Representation Theory and Geometry, Chapt. 5. London Mathematical Society Student Texts. Vol. 35. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511626241. ISBN9780521567244.
^Katz, Sheldon. Enumerative Geometry and String Theory. p. 96.
Fulton, William (1997). Young Tableaux. With Applications to Representation Theory and Geometry, Chapts. 5 and 9.4. London Mathematical Society Student Texts. Vol. 35. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511626241. ISBN9780521567244.