Abstract

We treat equivariant completions of toric contraction morphisms as an application of the toric Mori theory. For this purpose, we generalize the toric Mori theory for non-$\boldsymbol Q$-factorial toric varieties. So, our theory seems to be quite different from Reid's original combinatorial toric Mori theory. We also explain various examples of non-$\boldsymbol Q$-factorial contractions, which imply that the $\boldsymbol Q$-factoriality plays an important role in the Minimal Model Program. Thus, this paper completes the foundation of the toric Mori theory and shows us a new aspect of the Minimal Model Program.

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