Abstract

A complex manifold Y Y is said to have the interpolation property if a holomorphic map to Y Y from a subvariety S S of a reduced Stein space X X has a holomorphic extension to X X if it has a continuous extension. Taking S S to be a contractible submanifold of X = C n X=\mathbb {C}^n gives an ostensibly much weaker property called the convex interpolation property. By a deep theorem of Forstnerič, the two properties are equivalent. They (and about a dozen other nontrivially equivalent properties) define the class of Oka manifolds. This paper is the first attempt to develop Oka theory for singular targets. The targets that we study are affine toric varieties, not necessarily normal. We prove that every affine toric variety satisfies a weakening of the interpolation property that is much stronger than the convex interpolation property, but the full interpolation property fails for most affine toric varieties, even for a source as simple as the product of two annuli embedded in C 4 \mathbb {C}^4 .

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